No. 25, 2003
CONTENTS
Annual General Meetings of the Jane Austen Society of North America | 6 |
Message from the President
Joan Klingel Ray |
7 |
Editor’s Note
Laurie Kaplan |
9-10 |
Our Own Particular Jane JOAN AUSTEN-LEIGH, FREYDIS WELLAND |
11-18 |
AGM 2003 WINCHESTER, ENGLAND: "HOMECOMING" |
|
Homecoming JOANNA TROLLOPE |
21-25 |
The Wisdom of Jane Austen: An address delivered in Winchester Cathedral
on
Friday 10 October 2003 MICHAEL WHEELER |
26-32 |
Jane Austen’s Sailor Brothers: Francis and Charles in Life and Art BRIAN SOUTHAM |
33-45 |
Putting It Together: Matt Wolf Charts the Road to Get Austen Actors to
the Table MATT WOLF |
46-51 |
MISCELLANY |
|
Dance, Physicality, and Social Mobility in Jane Austen’s Persuasion CHERYL A. WILSON |
55-75 |
“Found Wanting?”: Second Impressions of a Famous First Sentence EDWARD NELL |
76-84 |
Melodramatic Transformation: George Eliot and the Refashioning of Mansfield
Park LAURA WHITE |
85-102 |
The Sincerest Form of Flattery: Twain’s Imitation of Austen JAMES FLAVIN |
103-109 |
How to Read and Why: Emma’s Gothic Mirrors SUSAN ALLEN FORD |
110-120 |
Jane Austen Through the Lens of Boca Festa CECILIA SALBER |
121-128 |
Circulating Jane MARILYN FRANCUS |
129-140 |
The Passion of Marianne Dashwood: Christian Rhetoric in Sense and Sensibility ANNE RICHARDS |
141-154 |
Jane Austen and Elizabeth Bennet: The Limits of Irony CAROLE MOSES |
155-164 |
Jane Austen’s Heroes and the Great Masculine Renunciation SARAH FRANTZ |
165-175 |
A Mind of Her Own: The Internationalization of Plot in Pride and
Prejudice ANNE THORNTON |
176-183 |
NATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTER: EMMA SEMINAR |
|
Emma: The
National Humanities Center 2003 Seminar PATRICIA MEYER SPACKS |
187-191 |
“I Always Take the Part of My Own Sex”: Emma’s Mrs. Elton and
the Rights of Women DEVONEY LOOSER |
192-196 |
“Emma Could Not Resist”: Complicity and the Christian Reader KENNETH R. MOREFIELD |
197-204 |
The Intimacy of Re-Reading Emma TITA CHICO |
205-212 |
Austen’s Emma and the Gendering of Enlightenment Satire NICHOLAS MASON |
213-219 |
Closing in on Close Reading: Emma, Austen, Thirteen Janeites,
and SRC AMY ELIZABETH SMITH |
220-227 |
Must and Ought: Moral and Real Conditions in Emma GEORGE JUSTICE |
228-232 |
Imagining the Real: The Development of Moral Imagination in Emma BARBARA MOORE |
233-238 |
“Insidious Designs”: Reading Jane Fairfax in and out of Highbury PAUL ALMONTE |
239-243 |
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