Jane Austen and Critical Theory is a collection of new essays that addresses the absence of Critical Theory in Austen studies and brings together innovative scholars who ask new and challenging questions about the efficacy of Austen's work.
Jane Austen and Critical Theory is a collection of new essays that addresses the absence of Critical Theory in Austen studies and brings together innovative scholars who ask new and challenging questions about the efficacy of Austen's work.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Michael Kramp is Professor of English at Lehigh University, USA. He is the author of Disciplining Love: Austen and the Modern Man (2007) and editor of Jane Austen and Masculinity (2017).
Inhaltsangabe
List of Contributors Introduction by Michael Kramp The Cultural Work of Austen's Life and Afterlives Lady Oracle: Jane Austen as High Priestess of Modern Romance or Secret Icon of Female Independence Megan A. Woodworth Jane Austen in Australia and New Zealand Joanne Wilkes "This is 1806, for Heaven's sake!": The Tension between Nostalgia and Feminism in Austen Adaptation and YouTube FanVids Rebecca White Identity, Relationality, and Community Logical Time in Austen's Persuasion: Desire and the Unproductive Anxious Interval Isabelle Michalski and David Sigler Pride and Prejudice and the Comedy of the Universal Daniela Garofalo Autonomy Will Set You Free, Or Will It?: Autonomy, Precarity and Survival Enit Karafili Steiner The Shrewdness of Sophia Croft in Persuasion Natasha Duquette The Known and the Possible in Austen Austen's Theory of Change Kate Singer Jane Austen's Angry Inch: The Nonbinary Son-to-Come Chris Washington Pleasure and Danger: Theorizing Adolescence in and Through Austen Shawn Lisa Maurer The Vitality of Austen The Austenian Mise-en-Scène Christopher C. Nagle Wickham Then and Now: From Historical Masculinity to Toxic Masculinity Kit Kincade Jane Austen, Feminist Legal Philosopher Sarah Ailwood Index
List of Contributors Introduction by Michael Kramp The Cultural Work of Austen's Life and Afterlives Lady Oracle: Jane Austen as High Priestess of Modern Romance or Secret Icon of Female Independence Megan A. Woodworth Jane Austen in Australia and New Zealand Joanne Wilkes "This is 1806, for Heaven's sake!": The Tension between Nostalgia and Feminism in Austen Adaptation and YouTube FanVids Rebecca White Identity, Relationality, and Community Logical Time in Austen's Persuasion: Desire and the Unproductive Anxious Interval Isabelle Michalski and David Sigler Pride and Prejudice and the Comedy of the Universal Daniela Garofalo Autonomy Will Set You Free, Or Will It?: Autonomy, Precarity and Survival Enit Karafili Steiner The Shrewdness of Sophia Croft in Persuasion Natasha Duquette The Known and the Possible in Austen Austen's Theory of Change Kate Singer Jane Austen's Angry Inch: The Nonbinary Son-to-Come Chris Washington Pleasure and Danger: Theorizing Adolescence in and Through Austen Shawn Lisa Maurer The Vitality of Austen The Austenian Mise-en-Scène Christopher C. Nagle Wickham Then and Now: From Historical Masculinity to Toxic Masculinity Kit Kincade Jane Austen, Feminist Legal Philosopher Sarah Ailwood Index
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