The Rise of Novels: A Resource Page |
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William
B. Warner, Professor of English, UC/ Santa Barbara |
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Useful Links or Homegrown ResourcesGeneral Research Resources (accessible through UCSB Davidson Library proxy server): OED, Historical Dababases; e-journals; etc. Title pages of 18th and 19th century novels Pemberly.com - Wealth of online resources about Jane Austen Austen Society of North America - "Dedicated to the study and celebration of the classic English author. Find out how to join the Society, or order journals and newsletters." |
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ArticlesCohn: “Transparent Minds: Narrative Modes for Presenting Consciousness in Fiction” Tony Tanner, “Secrecy and Sickness: ‘Sense and Sensibility’” (from Jane Austen, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard: 1986, 75-102. This reading "against the grain" offers a broadbased defense of Marianne Dashwood’s passion againt the conduct book lesson that Jane Austen (and Elinor) seem to intend. Lisa Zunshine, “Why Jane Austen Was Different, and Why We May Need Cognitive Science to See It.” This article (in Style) draws upon recent cognitive psychology to argue that Austen’s plots turn on complex acts of ‘mind reading’ of others; and that it teaches readers to do the same. Tony Tanner, “Knowledge and Opinion: ‘Pride and Prejudice’”, (from Jane Austen, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard, 1986, 75-102) This essay aruges that what separates Elizabeth and Darcy from the more ordinary characters is their ability to revise first impressions; Tanner notes the shift from a dramatic scenes to letter writing as the novel progresses. Deidre Lynch, “Jane Austen and the Social Machine,” (The Economy of Character, Chicago: U of Chicago Press, 1998, 207-239.) Claudia Johnson, “Not at all what a man should be!”: Remaking English Manhood in Emma,” in Equivocal Beings: Politics, Gender, and Sentimentality in 1790s (Chicago: Univ of Chicago P, 1995), 191-201. Peter Knox-Shaw “Emma and the flaws of Sovereignty,” (in Jane Austen and the Enlightenment, Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2004, 197-219) This article draws upon the intellectual history of the Enlightenment to link Emma to one of the most important ideas of the 18th century—the concept of sovereignty, the idea of who has the legitimate claim to rule others. Sir Walter Scott: Quarterley Reivew of Emma (January, 1821) (Project Gutenberg) |
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18th & 19th Century TextsWilliam Hogarth: The Harlot's Progress (Wikipedia) Samuel Richardson: Pamela Denis Diderot: "Eloge de Richardson" in Journal etranger, Jan. 1762 (WBW selections) Henry Fielding: Joseph Andrews Jane Austen (Austen.com): full text editions with chapter tags and excellent Austen links Nathaniel Hawthorne: Scarlet Letter |
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Bibliography |
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Resources[These notes and questions were developed for students of the rise of the novel in Britain--WBW]General Paradigms for Interpreting NovelsThe Pamela Media Event (1740-1742)Bakhtin and Joseph AndrewsJane Austen & Mansfield Park & Persuasion : notes and questions on Cohn, Said, Trilling, Anderson, Lynch, Galeprin |
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Courses |
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Professor Clifford Siskin, The Rise of the Novel, Undergrad, Columbia U, Spring 2004 | ||||||
Syllabus & Class Schedule--Professor Warner, UCSB, Winter 2008 |
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English 197: Jane Austen and the Rise of Novels
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