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Emma

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ISBN-10: 1853260282

ISBN-13: 9781853260285

Edition: 1994

Authors: Jane. Austen, Nicola Bradbury, Keith Carabine

List price: $4.99
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Book details

List price: $4.99
Copyright year: 1994
Publisher: Wordsworth Editions, Limited
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 416
Size: 5.08" wide x 7.80" long x 0.75" tall
Weight: 0.550
Language: English

Bram Stoker was born in Dublin, the son of a civil servant. Although a semi-invalid as a child, he went on the gain a reputation as a fine athlete at Trinity College, where he also excelled in mathematics and philosophy. Stoker worked as a civil servant and a journalist before becoming the personal secretary of the famous actor Henry Irving. He also wrote 15 works of fiction, only one of which is very memorable - Dracula (1897). This work, involving hypnotism, magic, the supernatural, and other elements of gothic fiction, went on to sell over one million copies and is still selling strongly today. So well known has his fictional character become that today it is possible to visit the castle…    

Jane Austen's life is striking for the contrast between the great works she wrote in secret and the outward appearance of being quite dull and ordinary. Austen was born in the small English town of Steventon in Hampshire, and educated at home by her clergyman father. She was deeply devoted to her family. For a short time, the Austens lived in the resort city of Bath, but when her father died, they returned to Steventon, where Austen lived until her death at the age of 41. Austen was drawn to literature early, she began writing novels that satirized both the writers and the manners of the 1790's. Her sharp sense of humor and keen eye for the ridiculous in human behavior gave her works…    

About the Series
About This Volume
About the Text
Emma: The Complete Text in Cultural Context
Introduction: Biographical and Historical Contexts
The Complete Text
Cultural Documents and Illustrations
A Riddle
Unfortunate Situation of Females, Fashionably Educated, and Left without a Fortune (1787)
Letter to his Son (1750)
Essay on the Picturesque (1810)
Our Domestic Policy No. 1 (1829)
Opinions of Emma (Ca. 1816)
Crossed Letter from Jane Austen to Cassandra (June 20, 1808)
The Frolics of the Sphinx (1820)
Square Pianoforte (1805)
A Barouche Landau (1805)
A View of Box Hill, Surrey (1733)
The Lincolnshire Ox (1790)
Emma: A Case Study in Contemporary Criticism
A Critical History of Emma
Gender Studies and Emma
What Is Gender Studies?
Gender Studies: A Selected Bibliography
A Gender Studies Perspective:
�ǣNot at all what a man should be!�Ǡ: Remaking English Manhood in Emma