YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :The Film Clueless and Jane Austens Emma
Essays 91 - 120
status. However, her best friend Charlotte Lucas was considerably less romantic and much more practical. In Chapter VI of Pride ...
Way" for Ian: forget college, provide for and rescue aging parents from the care of Lucys kids (ages six, three, and baby) and "se...
In five pages this paper discusses Pride and Prejudice in a consideration of how Jane Austen portrays relationship and marriages. ...
In five pages this paper discusses what these authors think constitutes a virtuous person as presented in their texts. Three sour...
In five pages this essay presents a comparative literary analysis of these works in terms of how women's social behavior is portra...
In twelve pages this report discusses how morality and stateliness are represented in this 1814 novel by Jane Austen. Four source...
This paper consists of four pages and examines the social, domestic, perceived, and realistic definitions of women's roles as repr...
points out that because magnanimous people have a proper set of values they frequently appear to have a "lofty detachment" to the ...
put before us, is a father who "trusts" everything will be fine, because at least there may be some land acquisition in the final ...
Admiral and Sophia Croft share the steering of a carriage and save them all from disaster (Austen 114). Sophia says of her sea li...
Although she may secretly yearn to be more like her sister Marianne, Elinor cannot help but maintain her rational outlook, inasmuc...
In six pages this paper discusses what human nature lesson heroine Elizabeth Bennet learns in these important chapters of Pride an...
In five pages this essay contrasts these very different literary styles with the Romantic period's 'Rime of the Ancient Mariner' b...
of the aristocracy-represented by her family-and Anne develops relationships with the middle class. The middle class characters h...
In five pages this paper examines how the persuasion theme is presented in the final novel written by Jane Austen. There are no o...
is entirely a matter of chance. If the dispositions of the parties are ever so well known to each other, or ever so similar befo...
Eliot provides us with a very intricate look at the aristocracy from these various perspectives. At first we are given the useless...
good art and literature. One of philosopher Aristotles most pronounced contentions was that art holds a mirror up to life; with t...
Austen and Cesaire present two very diverse approaches to the notion of time, in that ones perspective takes the form of British v...
All the women are intrigued with Darcy and the potential marriage material he represents, however he is nonplused by what he consi...
Then, there is the relationship between Mr. and Mrs. Bennet. They are bent on being the perfect family in that the father deals wi...
the first place: it was your brothers wicked fiance Isabella who had dreamt up such nonsense in the first place, and convinced you...
in hopes that Jane will be forced to stay over at the estate and therefore seal the deal that she has been looking for her daughte...
Further, the social context supports its own institutions in a cyclical manner and personal expectations are clearly based on the ...
shocker. The Father is in actuality a nun who had been fleeing the sins of her past. She comes upon the body of the deceased Fathe...
can see this is Book IV, lines 32-113. It is perhaps this section that gives us the most intricate look at the theme of religion, ...
him to be when she first met him at the ball: a rude egocentric boor. And yet, one of the Bingley sisters illuminates what society...
more so when Elizabeth - who relishes the opportunity to manipulate him - opts to dance instead with Mr. Wickham, a man Darcy deci...
She found, however, that it was one to which she must inure herself. Since he actually was expected in the country, she must teac...
treatment of women. Her novel, Sense and Sensibility considers the social position of the early nineteenth-century woman, and thr...