The Religious Dimension of Jane Austen's NovelsUMI Research Press, 1988 - 141 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 19
Página 32
... plot of Emma point in the same direction as my discussion of the theme of perfection . In other words , ideas and ideals of perfection not only , as I have shown , flicker around the characters , directing the reader as he judges them ...
... plot of Emma point in the same direction as my discussion of the theme of perfection . In other words , ideas and ideals of perfection not only , as I have shown , flicker around the characters , directing the reader as he judges them ...
Página 33
... plot ( which Jane Austen no doubt perceived was accomplished in a different way by the plot of Tom Jones ) is to call attention to its own limitations at the same time it is satisfying our desire to experience the illusion of an ...
... plot ( which Jane Austen no doubt perceived was accomplished in a different way by the plot of Tom Jones ) is to call attention to its own limitations at the same time it is satisfying our desire to experience the illusion of an ...
Página 64
... plot development ( after all , every plot is allowed a small number of relatively unmotivated , chance developments before its believability and organicity are called into question ) . However , in another series of episodes towards the ...
... plot development ( after all , every plot is allowed a small number of relatively unmotivated , chance developments before its believability and organicity are called into question ) . However , in another series of episodes towards the ...
Índice
The Case for a Traditional Religious Interpretation | 7 |
The Case for a Modern Religious Interpretation | 59 |
Conclusion | 109 |
Página de créditos | |
Otras 2 secciones no se muestran.
Términos y frases comunes
Anglican Anne's argued argument Austen's texts awareness basic behavior believe Box Hill central certainly charity Charlotte Lucas Charlotte's Christian claim clearly complex consciousness course critics Darcy Dashwood Descartes divine domestic comedy eighteenth-century Elinor Elizabeth Elton Emma's emotional essay existence experience faith Fanny feel fictional world Fielding's Frank Churchill fulfillment God's heroine human important insights intellectual interpretation Jane Austen's fiction Jane Austen's novels kind Knightley Knightley's Leslie Dewart limited lives Louisa Lucy Mansfield Park Marianne Marvin Mudrick meaning meaningful mind Miss Bates modern Montaigne moral Musgrove narrative narrator natural law natural-law never Northanger Abbey novelist one's Pascal perception perfect person perspective Persuasion plot possible present Pride and Prejudice principles psychological reader reality reason religion religious dimension Richard Hooker Scott sense Sense and Sensibility shallow simply sister social spiritual dimension subjective-objective split theme Thérèse Tom Jones total response traditional understanding University Press values Wentworth Weston Wolfgang Iser writers
Referencias a este libro
A Companion to Jane Austen Studies Laura Lambdin,Robert Thomas Lambdin No hay ninguna vista previa disponible - 2000 |