The Pleasures of Virtue: Political Thought in the Novels of Jane AustenRowman & Littlefield, 1995 - 202 من الصفحات Through a careful analysis of Jane Austen's novels that is sure to be controversial, Ruderman offers a unique interpretation of her subject's political philosophy. Her study challenges prevailing Austen scholarship, particularly contemporary feminist readings of Austen which impose historicist conventions upon her works. Locating and examining Austen's thought within a broad political and philosophical context, she concludes that Austen's conservative endorsement of marriage was motivated by her concern with happiness rather than with tradition. |
من داخل الكتاب
الصفحة 182
... virtuous and refined " ( Tocqueville , Democracy in America , 602 ) . 30. William Dean Howells , Heroines of Fiction , vol . 1 ( New York : Harper and Brothers , 1901 ) , 54–55 . 31. Austen , Letters , ( 30 November 1814 ) 182 Chapter Four.
... virtuous and refined " ( Tocqueville , Democracy in America , 602 ) . 30. William Dean Howells , Heroines of Fiction , vol . 1 ( New York : Harper and Brothers , 1901 ) , 54–55 . 31. Austen , Letters , ( 30 November 1814 ) 182 Chapter Four.
المحتوى
Education in Virtue | 23 |
Prudence Sensibility and Justice | 59 |
Proper Pride and Religious Virtue | 99 |
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