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Papers On British Literature
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Austen's Northanger Abbey: The Character of
General Tilney
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(5 pp). Northanger Abbey was written in 1797-98
under a different title. The manuscript was
revised around 1803 and sold to a London publisher,
Crosbie & Co., who sold it back in 1816. The
Signet Classic text is based on the first edition,
published by John Murray, London, in 1818--the year
following Miss Austen's death.
General Tilney 'not past the vigour of life,
' is the character which we will examine in this
discussion. The General as he is often referred to
in the text serves as the example of the 'old school,
' both as a male and as a parent. Since we are
talking of a coming of age story it is not unusual
that this character serves as a foil for the young
lady in question.
Filename: Bbasten2.rtf
Austen's Northanger Abbey: The Character of
General Tilney.
[ send me this paper ]
(5 pp). Northanger Abbey was written in 1797-98 under a different title. The manuscript was revised around 1803 and sold to a London publisher, Crosbie & Co., who sold it back in 1816. The Signet Classic text is based on the first edition, published by John Murray, London, in 1818, the year following Miss Austen's death. General Tilney
"not past the vigour of life," is the character,
which we will examine in this discussion. "The
General" as he is often referred to in the text
serves as the example of the "old school," both
as a male and as a parent. Since we are talking
of a coming of age story it is not unusual that
this character serves as a foil for the young
lady in question.
Filename: Bbastn2R.doc
Austen's Sense And Sensibility
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Jane Austen lived in a world where
social accountability was extremely important, as was the romantic
notion. This 5 page paper argues that Sense And Sensibilities goes
beyond the title to be incorporated into the very essence of the
characters and behavior of Elinor and Marianne Dashwood of Sussex. No
additional sources are listed.
Filename: KTsensen.wps
Austen/Pride & Prejudice & Emma
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A 16 page research paper that compares and contrasts Elizabeth Bennet and Emma Woodhouse, the female protagonists from Pride & Prejudice and Emma. The writer argues that both of these heroines transcend the narrow restrictive gender roles of Austen's era. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Filename: khlizema.rtf
Austen/Pride & Prejudice/Rev. Mr. Collins
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A 5 page essay that examines Jane Austen's characterization of the Rev. Mr. William Collins, and how this character enables Austen to satirize the social conventions of that era. Collins epitomizes many of the social conventions that Austen's fiction exposed as being largely responsible for keeping British women subjugated and economically disadvantaged. No additional sources cited.
Filename: khppcol.rtf
Authority and Control in Chaucer's The Wife of Bath and the World of
Margery Kempe
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This 12 page paper considers the notion of authority and control in Chaucer's The Wife of Bath and Margery Kempe's autobiography The World of Margery Kempe. This paper recognizes the social, religious and legal limitations that were imposed on women, but also suggests that both Alison, Wife of Bath, and Margery Kempe took a limitation, their gender-status and turned it into an advantage that was then recorded in the information presented by both characters. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Filename: MHwifeb_.wps
Author’s Ideology as Reflected in Alice Walker’s “The Color Purple” and Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice”
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This is a 5 page paper discussing how the ideologies of Alice Walker and Jane Austen are represented in their novels. Women novelists Alice Walker and Jane Austen provide different examples of how they have managed to represent their own ideologies within their novels. Alice Walker wrote “The Color Purple” in 1982 and conveyed her ideologies of equal and civil rights through the first person narration of the central character of Celie who is a poor, black woman living under the oppression of society and the men in her life. Her character slowly develops a sense of independence that Walker wishes upon her black female readers. In the 19th century, Jane Austen’s novel “Pride and Prejudice” also included Austen’s feminist ideologies in regards to many of the unreasonable and unequal aspects in society in the treatment of women. Because Austen was writing at a time when women were expected to only write sentimental novels however, Austen reveals her ideologies through the minor characters in the book, such as Mrs. Bennet, who through a satirical twist find society’s conventions unreasonable while her central characters are considered conventional and therefore accepted.
Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: TJidper1.rtf
Baroness Orczy/ The Scarlet Pimpernel
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A 5 page review of Barness Orczy's nineteenth-century adventure story, "The Scarlet Pimpernel." The writer argues in this novel, one finds the basic plot upon which a great deal of popular entertainment has been based. No additional sources cited.
Filename: khscpimp.wps
Behn's Oroonoka And British Colonialism
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Written in 1688, Oroonoko is a
story of an African Prince who is wed to the woman of his dreams and
then captured and sold into slavery. It is also the story of an
aristocratic young woman who 'befriends' the savage. This 5 page paper
argues that Behn represents all the major patterns of structural
differentiation in colonial, or plantation, society, such as ethnic and
cultural status, social class, ownership of property and land, economic
wealth, employment, education and political power in her story. It then
compares Behn's representation with the relationship between Ireland and
Britain during the same time period. No additional sources are listed.
Filename: KTorooab.wps
Beowulf & Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
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A 7 page research paper that contrasts and compares the topic of heroism in Beowulf and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. The writer concludes that by the time that Sir Gawain and the Green Knight was recorded, the cultural paradigm had changed from one stresses the warrior ethos to a Christian perspective. No longer was it acceptable for a knight to place his loyalty primarily to his liege lord or to view himself in a heroic context, as his first loyalty was to God and, before God, he should be humble and contrite. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Filename: khbeogaw.rtf
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