Jane Austen and the Enlightenment

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Jane Austen and the Enlightenment

Peter Knox-Shaw

Cambridge University Press, 2009

  • : pbk

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Originally published: 2004

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Jane Austen was received by her contemporaries as a new voice, but her late twentieth-century reputation as a nostalgic reactionary still lingers on. In this radical revision of her engagement with the culture and politics of her age, Peter Knox-Shaw argues that Austen was a writer steeped in the Enlightenment, and that her allegiance to a sceptical tradition within it, shaped by figures such as Adam Smith and David Hume, lasted throughout her career. Knox-Shaw draws on archival and other neglected sources to reconstruct the intellectual atmosphere of the Steventon Rectory where Austen wrote her juvenilia, and follows the course of her work through the 1790s and onwards, showing how minutely responsive it was to the many shifting movements of those turbulent years. Jane Austen and the Enlightenment is an important contribution to the study both of Jane Austen and of intellectual history at the turn of the nineteenth century.

Table of Contents

  • Part I. The Eighteenth-Century Legacy: 1. Auspices
  • 2. Pride and Prejudice, a politics of the picturesque
  • 3. Northanger Abbey and the liberal historians
  • 4. Sense and Sensibility and the philosophers
  • Part II. Engaging with the New Age: 5. Diffraction
  • 6. Mansfield Park: charting the religious revival
  • 7. Emma, and the flaws of sovereignty
  • 8. Persuasion: light on an old genre
  • 9. Sanditon and speculation
  • Bibliography.

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