What Jane Austen's Characters Read (and Why)
Details
The first detailed account of Austen''s characters'' reading experience to date, this book explores both what her characters read and what their literary choices would have meant to Austen''s own readership, both during her life and today. Jane Austen was a voracious and extensive reader, so it''s perhaps no surprise that many of her characters are also readers-from Mr. Collins in Pride and Prejudice to Fanny Price in Mansfield Park . Beginning by looking at Austen''s own reading as well as her interest in readers'' responses to her work, the book then focuses on each of her novels, looking at the particulars of her characters'' reading and unpacking the multiple (and often surprising) ways in which what they read informs our reading. What Jane Austen''s Characters Read (and Why) uses Austen''s own love of reading to invite us to rethink the ways in which she imagined her characters and their lives beyond the novels.>
Susan Allen Ford's scholarship on literary allusions in Jane Austen's novels has long informed critical reading of Austen's writing. With its focus on what Austen's characters read, this publication not only offers brilliant new insights into those characters but also insights into Austen's own reading and her deep critical familiarity with her predecessors and contemporaries. This book goes beyond those insights, however, to address, in graceful, accessible prose, Austen's relationship with her own imagined readers and her expectations for those readers, indisputably proving Austen's acute self-awareness of herself as an author and all that awareness implies.
Autorentext
Susan Allen Ford is Professor of English Emerita at Delta State University, USA, and has been editor of Persuasions: The Jane Austen Journal and Persuasions On-Line since 2006.
Klappentext
"Jane Austen was a voracious and extensive reader, so it's perhaps no surprise that many of her characters display a similar appetite for the written word. But what did her characters read and what would their literary choices have meant to Austen's own readership, both at the time and today? This book answers that question and more, focusing on each of her novels and unpacking the multiple (and often surprising) ways in which these inform the reading of Austen's works"--
Zusammenfassung
This is one of those rare publications that combines the rigours of scholarly work with the seductions of witty and extremely readable prose. - The Conversation
Inhalt
Introduction: Drawing Character, Reading Books: Building a Society of Readers
Chapter 1: "Her Reading Was Very Extensive": Austen and Her Community of Great Readers
Chapter 2: Readers of Feeling: Northanger Abbey and Sensibility
Chapter 3: "What Becomes of the Moral?" Reading Conduct Books and Pride and Prejudice
Chapter 4: "In the Midst of Theatrical Nonsense": Performative Reading in Mansfield Park
Chapter 5: Becoming a Renter, a Chuser of Books in Mansfield Park
Chapter 6: Meaning to Read More: Emma and the Clever Reader
Chapter 7: Readers of Romance: Persuasion and Sanditon
Bibliography
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- Sprache Englisch
- Gewicht 445g
- Autor Susan Allen Ford
- Titel What Jane Austen's Characters Read (and Why)
- Veröffentlichung 12.07.2024
- ISBN 978-1-350-41671-0
- Format Kartonierter Einband
- EAN 9781350416710
- Jahr 2024
- Größe H236mm x B15mm x T157mm
- Herausgeber Bloomsbury Trade
- Anzahl Seiten 280
- GTIN 09781350416710