Reflecting the dynamic and expansive nature of Austen studies, A Companion toJane Austen provides 42 essays from a distinguished team of literary scholarsthat examine the full breadth of the English novelist's works and career. Provides the most comprehensive and up-to-date array of Austen scholarship Functions both as a scholarly reference and as a survey of the most innovative speculative developments in the field of Austen studies Engages at length with changing contexts and cultures of reception from the nineteenth to the twenty-first centuries INDICE: List of Figures ix Notes on Contributors x List of Abbreviations xvii A Note to the Reader xviii Acknowledgments xix Introduction 1 Claudia L. Johnson and Clara Tuite Part I The Life and the Texts 11 1 Jane Austen's Life and Letters 13 Kathryn Sutherland 2 The Austen Family Writing: Gossip, Parody, and Corporate Personality 31 Robert L. Mack 3 The Literary Marketplace 41 Jan Fergus 4 Texts and Editions 51 Brian Southam 5 Jane Austen, Illustrated 62 Laura Carroll and John Wiltshire Part II Reading the Texts 79 6 Young Jane Austen: Author 81 Juliet McMaster 7 Moving In and Out: The Property of Self in Senseand Sensibility 91 Susan C. Greenfi eld 8 The Illusionist: Northanger Abbey and Austens Uses of Enchantment 101 Sonia Hofkosh 9 Re: Reading Pride and Prejudice: 'What think you of books?' 112 Susan J. Wolfson 10 The Missed Opportunities of Mansfi eld Park 123 William Galperin 11 Emma: Word Games and Secret Histories 133 Linda Bree 12 Persuasion: The Gradual Dawning 143 Fiona Stafford 13Sanditon and the Book 153 George Justice Part III Literary Genres and Genealogies 163 14 Turns of Speech and Figures of Mind 165 Margaret Anne Doody 15 Narrative Technique: Austen and Her Contemporaries 185 Jane Spencer 16 Time and Her Aunt 195 Michael Wood 17 Austen's Realist Play 206 Harry E. Shaw 18 Dealingin Notions and Facts: Jane Austen and History Writing 216 Devoney Looser 19 Sentiment and Sensibility: Austen, Feeling, and Print Culture 226 Miranda Burgess 20 The Gothic Austen 237 Nancy Armstrong Part IV Political, Social, and Cultural Worlds 249 21 From Politics to Silence: Jane Austens Nonreferential Aesthetic 251 Mary Poovey 22 The Army, the Navy, and the Napoleonic Wars 261 Gillian Russell 23 Jane Austen, the 1790s, and the French Revolution 272 Mary Spongberg 24 Feminisms 282 Vivien Jones 25 Imagining Sameness and Difference: Domestic and Colonial Sisters in Mansfield Park 292 Deirdre Coleman 26 Jane Austen and the Nation 304 Claire Lamont 27 Religion 314 Roger E. Moore 28 Family Matters 323 Ruth Perry 29 Austen and Masculinity 332 E. J. Clery 30 The Trouble with Things: Objects and the Commodifi cation of Sociability 343 Barbara M. Benedict 31 Luxury: Making Sense of Excess in Austens Narratives 355 Diego Saglia 32 Austen's Accomplishment: Music and the Modern Heroine 366 Gillen D'Arcy Wood 33 Jane Austen and Performance: Theatre, Memory, and Enculturation 377 Daniel O'Quinn Part V Reception and Reinvention 389 34 Jane Austen and Genius 391 Deidre Lynch 35 Jane Austen's Periods 402 Mary A. Favret 36 Nostalgia 413 Nicholas Dames 37 Austen's European Reception 422 Anthony Mandal 38 Jane Austen andthe Silver Fork Novel 434 Edward Copeland 39 Jane Austen in the World: New Women, Imperial Vistas 444 Katie Trumpener 40 Sexuality 456 Fiona Brideoake 41 Jane Austen and Popular Culture 467 Judy Simons 42 Austenian Subcultures 478 Mary Ann O'Farrell B
- ISBN: 978-0-470-67238-9
- Editorial: John Wiley & Sons
- Encuadernacion: Rústica
- Páginas: 560
- Fecha Publicación: 23/12/2011
- Nº Volúmenes: 1
- Idioma: Inglés