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Jane Austen, "Emma" (Norton Critical Editions), 3rd Edition
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Jane Austen, "Emma" (Norton Critical Editions), 3rd Edition
W.W. Norton & Co. | 3rd Edition | 2000 | ISBN: 0393972844 | 464 pages | siPDF | 6.9 MB
W.W. Norton & Co. | 3rd Edition | 2000 | ISBN: 0393972844 | 464 pages | siPDF | 6.9 MB
The Third Edition of Jane Austen's popular comedic novel is based on the 1816 first edition text, which has been carefully collated by the editor.
"Backgrounds" includes an abundance of source material that sheds light on Austen's life and reveals some of her private attitudes toward her writing. Readers will enjoy comparing real events in Austen's life with her fictionalized accounts in Emma. Included is a selection of Austen's letters to her sister, Cassandra; an excerpt from The Watsons (a novel fragment) describing that most Austenian of social events, a country ball; Virginia Woolf s commentary on The Watsons; and two biographical sketches by family members. The editor has also included Austen's "Plan of a Novel" and relevant correspondence between Austen and J. S. Clark (chaplain to the Prince Regent).
"Reviews and Criticism" includes sixteen wide-ranging assessments of the novel, three of them new to the Third Edition. Sir Walter Scott, George Henry Lewes, Henry James, A. C. Bradley, Reginald Farrer, E. M. Forster, A. Walton Litz, Robert Alan Donovan, Marilyn Butler, Mary Poovey, Claudia L. Johnson, Ian Watt, Maggie Lane, Suzanne Juhasz, and John Wiltshire provide critical overviews. The section culminates with Suzanne Ferriss's account of the popular film versions of Emma, recently released.
A Chronology and Selected Bibliography are included.
Contents
| “ | Preface to the Third Edition The Text of Emma Backgrounds Jane Austen's Life and Her Fiction Henry Thomas Austen • Biographical Notice James E. Austen-Leigh • Memoir of Jane Austen Jane Austen Letters to Her Sister, Cassandra [An Account of a Ball, 1800] [The Events of a Day, 1805] [The Events of Two Days, 1813] From The Watsons [An Account of a Ball, 1803 or Later] Virginia Woolf • [The Watsons] Maggie Lane • Daily Life in Jane Austen's England Meals and Manners Breakfast The Midday Meal Dinner Tea Supper Rich and Poor The Aristocracy The Gentry The New Middle Classes Labourers, Servants, and the Poor Jane Austen On Her Own Art Jane Austen's Correspondence with J. S. Clarke J. S. Clarke to Jane Austen [asking her to write a novel about a clergyman] Jane Austen to J. S. Clarke [explaining why she cannot] J. S. Clarke to Jane Austen [asking again] J. S. Clarke to Jane Austen [proposing a historical romance] Jane Austen to J. S. Clarke [decisively refusing] Jane Austen • Plan of a Novel, According to Hints from Various Quarters Reviews and Criticism Sir Walter Scott • [Review of Emma] George Henry Lewes • The Lady Novelists Henry James • The Lesson of Balzac A. C. Bradley • Jane Austen: A Lecture Reginald Farrer • Jane Austen, ob. July 18, 1917 E. M. Forster • Jane Austen A. Walton Litz • The Limits of Freedom: Emma Robert Alan Donovan • The Mind of Jane Austen Marilyn Butler • "Emma" Mary Poovey • The True English Style Claudia L. Johnson • Emma: "Woman, lovely woman reigns alone." Ian Watt • Jane Austen and the Traditions of Comic Aggression Suzanne Juhasz • Bonnets and Balls: Reading Jane Austen's Letters John Wiltshire • Emma Suzanne Ferriss • Emma Becomes Clueless Jane Austen: A Chronology Selected Bibliography | ” |
Tags: Literature, LiteraryCriticism, 19CEngland
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