In her study of animals in Jane Austen, Seeber situates the author's work within eighteenth- and nineteenth-century debates about human-animal relations. She shows that Austen associates the domination of animals with that of women, challenges readings that identify Austen's depictions of nature as benign celebrations of England's imperial power, a
In her study of animals in Jane Austen, Seeber situates the author's work within eighteenth- and nineteenth-century debates about human-animal relations. She shows that Austen associates the domination of animals with that of women, challenges readings that identify Austen's depictions of nature as benign celebrations of England's imperial power, a
Barbara K. Seeber is Associate Professor of English at Brock University, Canada. She is the author of General Consent in Jane Austen: A Study of Dialogism (2000).
Inhaltsangabe
Preface, Barbara K. Seeber Introduction: A Nest of My Own, Barbara K. Seeber Chapter 1 The Animal Question and Women, Barbara K. Seeber Chapter 2 Making a Hole in Her Heart, Barbara K. Seeber Chapter 3 Too Cool about Sporting, Barbara K. Seeber Chapter 4 Evergreen, Barbara K. Seeber Chapter 5 Legacies and Diets, Barbara K. Seeber Chapter 6 Rock and Rain, Barbara K. Seeber Chapter 7 Conclusion, Barbara K. Seeber
Preface, Barbara K. Seeber Introduction: A Nest of My Own, Barbara K. Seeber Chapter 1 The Animal Question and Women, Barbara K. Seeber Chapter 2 Making a Hole in Her Heart, Barbara K. Seeber Chapter 3 Too Cool about Sporting, Barbara K. Seeber Chapter 4 Evergreen, Barbara K. Seeber Chapter 5 Legacies and Diets, Barbara K. Seeber Chapter 6 Rock and Rain, Barbara K. Seeber Chapter 7 Conclusion, Barbara K. Seeber
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