Recreating Jane AustenCambridge University Press, 02/08/2001 - 179 من الصفحات Recreating Jane Austen is a book for readers who know and love Austen s work. Stimulated by the recent crop of film and television versions of Austen s novels, John Wiltshire examines how they have been transposed and recreated in another age and medium. Wiltshire illuminates the process of recreation through the work of the psychoanalyst Donald Winnicott, and offers Jane Austen s own relation to Shakespeare as a suggestive parallel. Exploring the romantic impulse in Austenian biography, Jane Austen as a commodity, and offering a re-interpretation of Pride and Prejudice, this book approaches the central question of the role Jane Austen plays in the contemporary cultural imagination. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-5 من 31
الصفحة
... ideas with me and has been extraordinarily generous and supportive of my work on Austen over the past four years . With characteristic grace , she has allowed me to borrow the title of one of her papers for Chapter 3. Justin Kelly SJ ...
... ideas with me and has been extraordinarily generous and supportive of my work on Austen over the past four years . With characteristic grace , she has allowed me to borrow the title of one of her papers for Chapter 3. Justin Kelly SJ ...
الصفحة 6
... ideas and concepts with which to approach a notion that was no doubt discarded because , together with a clutch of similarly dynamic notions , it was used ' to designate a locus of opacity'.22 Winnicott , a paediatrician as well as ...
... ideas and concepts with which to approach a notion that was no doubt discarded because , together with a clutch of similarly dynamic notions , it was used ' to designate a locus of opacity'.22 Winnicott , a paediatrician as well as ...
الصفحة 11
... and Prejudice , which follows , offers a more complete ' reading ' of the novel , stimulated in part by the television film , but which also allows the further development of an idea which is central to the Introduction II.
... and Prejudice , which follows , offers a more complete ' reading ' of the novel , stimulated in part by the television film , but which also allows the further development of an idea which is central to the Introduction II.
الصفحة 12
John Wiltshire. further development of an idea which is central to the book - how identificatory love becomes transformed into adult love . The final chapter ' The genius and the facilitating environment ' which looks briefly at Emma ...
John Wiltshire. further development of an idea which is central to the book - how identificatory love becomes transformed into adult love . The final chapter ' The genius and the facilitating environment ' which looks briefly at Emma ...
الصفحة 19
عذرًا، محتوى هذه الصفحة مقيَّد.
عذرًا، محتوى هذه الصفحة مقيَّد.
المحتوى
Imagining Jane Austens life | 13 |
Recreating Jane Austen Jane Austen in Manhattan Metropolitan Clueless | 38 |
An Englishwomans constitution Jane Austen and Shakespeare | 58 |
From drama to novel to film inwardness in Mansfield Park and Persuasion | 77 |
Pride and Prejudice love and recognition | 99 |
The genius and the facilitating environment | 125 |
Notes | 140 |
A note on films cited | 163 |
Bibliography | 165 |
176 | |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
adaptation Anne Anne's argued Audrey Austen in Manhattan Bennet Bingley biography Bridget Bridget Jones's Diary Cambridge Chapter character Cher's Clarendon Press Clueless contemporary critical cultural D. W. Winnicott Darcy Darcy's declares dialogue dramatic earlier Elizabeth Elizabeth Bennet Emma Emma's emotional Essays Fanny Price Fanny's fantasy Faye feelings Fiction figure film film's free indirect speech Freud Harding's heroine Honan Ian Watt Ibid identification imagination Imitation inner irony Jane Austen Jane Austen's novels Johnson Lady Lefroy letter Literary London Mansfield Park means Miss Bates mode mother narrative narrator Nokes Northanger Abbey notion novelist object original Oxford passage Pemberley perhaps Persuasion phrase play present Pride and Prejudice Psychoanalysis psychological reader reading reality recognition recreation relation remarks resembles romantic Routledge says scene Sense and Sensibility Shakespeare simultaneously social soliloquy Southam suggest theory thinking thought tion Tom Lefroy Tomalin University Press whilst Whit Stillman words writes York