YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Mary Robinson Charlotte Smith and Jane Austen on Romantic Love
Essays 31 - 60
In five pages this paper examines Charlotte Bronte's heroine as she strives to obtain social acceptance and love in the novel Jane...
more so when Elizabeth - who relishes the opportunity to manipulate him - opts to dance instead with Mr. Wickham, a man Darcy deci...
we are talking of a coming of age story it is appropriate that this character serves as a foil for the young lady in question. The...
In six pages the ways in which the fairytale tradition is reflected in this novel is examined in terms of the female psyche and th...
is "large and stout for his age," meaning of course that hes much larger than the girl (Bront?, 2007). He is a glutton as well and...
mother, Elinor and Marianne (who are both young women) and younger sister Margaret, by beginning with the death of Henry Dashwood,...
"sympathize" with her, as she was the opposite of them in "temperament, in capacity,...a useless thing, incapable of serving their...
of the Rigger Bar" (Erdrich 1). From this moment her short story continues until she is alone and wandering in heavy falling sno...
of Emma, or Cher in the film. Ferriss notes how "Heckerling offers a series of suggestive parallels between Austens heroine and he...
which involved a patriarchal society. At the same time there are characters in the story, female characters, who possess money a...
beautiful or charming as her sister. Her charm lies in her honesty, openness and her wit. Darcy is a man who, at first, seems take...
he has not really learned a great deal, except to perhaps further solidify his lack of desire to be civilized. In reading this sto...
this regard. The following discussion of Austens Northanger Abbey will explore the way that Austen depicts the nature of emotion a...
marriage was a way to survive as an individual and in society. Men and women in society who were not married were seen as eccentri...
This essay pertains to the way in which Elizabeth Bennett is characterized in Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice. The writer partic...
In five pages this paper discusses how Jane Austen's once dismissed and critically panned novel has vindicated itself because of t...
In 6 pages Jane Austen's novel is analyzed in terms of the importance of socialization through visiting and parties. There are no...
In six pages this paper discusses themes of class and snobbery as they are represented by Thornton in Elizabeth Gaskell's North an...
In three pages this paper considers the role money plays throughout Jane Austen's novel Pride and Prejudice. There are no other s...
In five pages this paper examines British society of Jane Austen's time and what her novel reveals about single women and how they...
In five pages this paper presents scene comparisons between Jane Austen's novel and a film adaptation of Pride and Prejudice. Two...
In 8 pages this paper discusses how the socially conservative attitudes of the 19th century manifest themselves in Jane Austen's P...
In five pages this paper discusses how happiness can be achieved through virtue as illustrated in Jane Austen's Sense and Sensibil...
This paper examines the roles played by male and female characters in the society created within Jane Austen's literature. This f...
In six pages this paper discusses the chapter that focuses upon Darcy and Elizabeth's relationship in Jane Austen's Pride and Prej...
are futile and are only keeping her from seeing the truth. One author, in reviewing a book about Austens work, notes that...
difference in the narrative techniques the authors have used. For Austen there is an immediate theme set up, a perspective that of...
his letter: "He must be an oddity, I think, said she. I cannot make him out.--There is something very pompous in his style.--And ...
a condition wherein the women are not slaves, we also see that the past, which involves at least Sethes enslavement, is very real ...
about her. She immediately sees him as rude, arrogant, and prideful. The entire story is essentially based around this attitude as...