Jane Austen and the Morality of ConversationThis important study investigates how Austen worked with, and played upon, the cracks and faultlines which time had uncovered in the ideals of polite conversation. In a wide-ranging argument combining intellectual history and literary stylistics, Bharat Tandon explores such activities as flirtation and ventriloquism, in order to show how a form of conversational morality is what Austen's novels both describe and set out to achieve. |
Contents
Austens Early Fiction | 55 |
Flirting | 76 |
Throwing the Voice | 112 |
Habit and Habitation | 176 |
Notes | 243 |
280 | |
296 | |
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Common terms and phrases
Addison Anne Austen-Leigh Austen's fiction Cambridge Cassandra Austen Catherine century Chapter characters Clarissa comedy comic Cowper critical Darcy Edmund eighteenth eighteenth-century Elizabeth Emma Emma's emotional English epistolary Essays example eyes Fanny Fanny Burney Fanny's feeling FLIRTING Geoffrey Hill HABIT AND HABITATION Harmondsworth Harriet heart Henry ibid imaginative implicature James JANE AUSTEN Janeites Johnson joke juvenilia Lady Susan language Leavis Leavis's less Letters literary living London look manners Mansfield Park metaphor mind MORALITY OF CONVERSATION narration narrative nature Northanger Abbey novel Nussbaum Oxford University Press particular Penguin person Persuasion phrase picturesque plot poem poetic poetry polite Pride and Prejudice prose reader reading repr rhetorical Richardson Samuel Johnson Samuel Richardson Sanditon Sense and Sensibility sentimental social sofa space Spectator speech story suggests things thought THROWING THE VOICE tion Tristram Shandy turn ventriloquism words Wordsworth writing