LIT 4046 Romantic Literature: Jane Austen (PLNU) Dashboard

Description

SenseAndSensibilityTitlePage.jpgPrideAndPrejudiceTitlePage.jpgAll text title pageAll text title page for Northanger Abbey and PersuasionFile:Jane Austen coloured version.jpg - Wikimedia Commons

Our study of Romantic Literature will focus on the writing of Jane Austen (1775-1817), whose life and work is situated Regency Period and so carries the cultural influences of both the Enlightenment and the Romantic Periods. As we closely read four of her novels, Sense and Sensibility (1811), Pride and Prejudice (1813), Mansfield Park (1814), and Persuasion (1818), , we will work to recognize and analyze the presence of major cultural issues that characterize the rise of Romanticism however overt or unacknowledged they may appear. Key issues will include the rise of democracy as expressed in Austen's consideration of women's lives and choices especially in relation to  marriage and security; the laws governing inheritance and men's roles in maintenance of estates and wealth; the spectres of the lost American Colonies, the French Revolution, and military life; the struggle to abolish the slave trade and slavery in the British Empire as well the gentry's complicity in the economics of slavery, the genres of social satire, comedy of manners, and the female bildungsroman.

In tandem with our focus on the primary literary texts, we will also explore historical sources, maps, literary criticism of Austen's work, and sociological, religious, and cultural sources.

Galleries, Timelines, and Maps

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Individual Entries

Place
Posted by Carmen Flores-Lopez on Wednesday, November 4, 2020 - 20:25

According to the pre-vetted COVE location, "Ramsgate is a seaside town located in Kent...[with]...[t]ourism and fishing [as] its main industries" (COVE Admin). Furthermore, the importance of this location in Pride and Prejudice is clarified in "The Topography of England and Englishness in Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice" by Shokhan Rasool Ahmed where Ahmed states, "Elizabeth realizes Mr. Darcy and Wickham's real nature through Lydia's elopement to Ramsgate" (Ahmed, 29). 

Ahmed, Shokhan Rasool. "The Topography of England and Englishness in Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice"International Journal on Studies in English Language and Literature (...

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Place
Posted by Carmen Flores-Lopez on Wednesday, November 4, 2020 - 13:57

The Chain Pier, Brighton, by John Constable 1824–1827

File:John Constable 024.jpg

"Brighton is a seaside town on the south coast of England. It developed as a seaside resort in the late eighteenth century due to the patronage of the Prince Regent, the later George IV, who constructed his Royal Pavilion in the town. It was connected to London by rail in 1841, allowing its tourist industry to expand. In Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, Lydia Bennet elopes with Wickham from Brighton...

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Place
Posted by Camryn Ostrander on Thursday, October 29, 2020 - 01:27

Portsmouth is the village where the Price family lives with their nine children. This is also where Fanny returns to after she leaves Mansfield Park. ...

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Chronology Entry
Posted by Carmen Flores-Lopez on Thursday, October 22, 2020 - 08:51
Chronology Entry
Posted by Anthony Calvez on Monday, October 19, 2020 - 15:50
Chronology Entry
Posted by Carmen Flores-Lopez on Thursday, October 15, 2020 - 19:58
Chronology Entry
Posted by Anthony Calvez on Wednesday, October 14, 2020 - 13:57
Chronology Entry
Posted by Camryn Ostrander on Friday, September 11, 2020 - 14:59
Chronology Entry
Posted by Bettina Pedersen on Saturday, August 15, 2020 - 17:56
Chronology Entry
Posted by Bettina Pedersen on Saturday, August 15, 2020 - 17:50

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