Synopses & Reviews
This volume is the first to address Jane Austen's writings within the traditions of Romanticism. Tuite's study presents a series of historically contextualized readings of Austen's juvenilia (Catharine, or The Bower and The History of England), Sense and Sensibility, Mansfield Park and Austen's posthumously published novel, Sanditon, to examine ways in which Romantic-period definitions of nation, culture and literature continue to function in contemporary readings of Austen and her period.
Review
"A theoretically sophisticated...meditation on Austen's novels." Studies in English Literature"The most exhilirating aspects...lie in Tuite's conceptualization of Austen's oeuvre and in her brilliantly inventive, distinctive ways of opening up the texts to new readings, new echoes and new contexts." European Romantic Review"In chapters on Austen's juvenilia ... Tuite presents a very familiar figure: Jane Austen the 'conservative feminist' and defender of 'Burkean patriliny' among the landed gentry, albeit a gentry open to new female energy from its lower regions... The result is a book that advanced specialists may find suggestive...." Choice
Review
"A theoretically sophisticated...meditation on Austen's novels." Studies in English Literature"In chapters on Austen's juvenilia ... Tuite presents a very familiar figure: Jane Austen the 'conservative feminist' and defender of 'Burkean patriliny' among the landed gentry, albeit a gentry open to new female energy from its lower regions... The result is a book that advanced specialists may find suggestive...." Choice
Synopsis
A full-length scholarly monograph examining Jane Austen's writings within the traditions of Romanticism.
Synopsis
A full-length scholarly monograph examining Jane Austen's writings within the traditions of Romanticism.
About the Author
Clara Tuite is a Lecturer in English at the University of Melbourne. She is an associate editor of The Oxford Companion to the Romantic
Table of Contents
List of illustrations; Acknowledgements; Note on texts used; Introduction. The 'fall into a quotation': tracking the canonical, Romantic and post-Romantic Austen; 1. Aunt Jane's 'early workings' and 'betweenities': closet dramas of literary apprenticeship; 2. Sensibility, free indirect style and the Romantic technology of discretion; 3. Breeding heritage culture: Mansfield Park, Reflections on the Revolution in France and the glorious revolutions of the country house; 4. Austen's Romantic fragment: Sanditon and the sexual politics of land speculation; Epilogue; Notes; Select bibliography; Index.