Jane Austein : Pride and Prejudice
Contents: Preface. 1. Introduction. 2. Pride and prejudice, Jane Austen. 3. First price miss bates writes to Emma. 4. Society of Jane Austen. 5. Critical study on Jane Austein writing. 6. Pride and prejudice and zombies. 7. Persuasion by Jane Austen. 8. Jane Austen and the modern man. 9. Imagining malleable masculinity and radical nomadism. 10. Jane Austen\'s pride and prejudice: a Novel of real reality. 11. Literary analysis for pride and prejudice. 12. Mansfield park: past and criticism. 13. Jane Austen;\'s novels as a guide to social and individual responsibility. 14. Anxisty in Jane Austen\'s sense and sensibility. 15. The sense and sensibility of betrayal. 16. Traipsing into the forest: landscapes and rivalry in Jane Austen\'s mansfield park. 17. The phraseology of Jane Austen\'s persuasion. 18. Realist Novels by remale writers Jane Austen and Jane Eyre. 19. Emma observation of the world from within, and without the feminine sphere. Bibliography. Index.
"Jane Austen began writing the novel which later became pride and prejudice in October of 1796 and finished it by August of the following year, she was then twenty one years old. Little is known of this early version of the story beyond its original title. First impressions. Fortunately for all of her admirers, whether Austen was discouraged or not by her first rejection, she continued to write; though, it was not until the winter of 1811, fully fourteen years after finishing first impressions, that she again picked up that manuscript and began revising it into the version we know today as pride and prejudice. This occurred in the wake of her first publishing success the publication of Sense and Sensibility on 30 October 1811. Pride and prejudice was far more fortunate than its earlier incarnation; it was accepted for publication and was presented to the world on 28 January `1813. " (jacket)