Skip to main content

Austen, Jane, 1775-1817

 Person

Dates

  • Existence: 1775-12-16 - 1817-07-18

Occupations

Places

Topics

Languages Used

  • English

Found in 4 Collections and/or Records:

Austen : writing the nineteenth century heroine, 2008

 Item — Call number MU Thesis Bis
Identifier: b2233149
Scope and Contents From the Collection: The collection consists of theses written by students enrolled in the Monmouth University graduate English program. The holdings are primarily bound print documents that were submitted in partial fulfillment of requirements for the Master of Arts or Master of Fine Arts degrees.Students become eligible to pursue the Master of Fine Arts (M.F.A.) degree if they have obtained a Master of Arts...
Dates: 2008

Bound to marriage : a critical analysis of marriage in Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice, 2013

 Item — Call number MU Thesis Bel
Identifier: b5596298
Scope and Contents From the Collection: The collection consists of theses written by students enrolled in the Monmouth University graduate English program. The holdings are primarily bound print documents that were submitted in partial fulfillment of requirements for the Master of Arts or Master of Fine Arts degrees.Students become eligible to pursue the Master of Fine Arts (M.F.A.) degree if they have obtained a Master of Arts...
Dates: 2013

Jane Austen : the acts of implication in two centuries of criticism, 2016

 Item — Call number MU Thesis Haf
Identifier: b7667270
Scope and Contents From the Collection: The collection consists of theses written by students enrolled in the Monmouth University graduate English program. The holdings are primarily bound print documents that were submitted in partial fulfillment of requirements for the Master of Arts or Master of Fine Arts degrees.Students become eligible to pursue the Master of Fine Arts (M.F.A.) degree if they have obtained a Master of Arts...
Dates: 2016

Pride Prejudice and Zombies : an evaluation of Austen's use of socially circulating rhetoric regarding the modern phantasmagorical reinvention of Pride and Prejudice, 2017

 Item — Call number MU Thesis Lej
Identifier: b7669059
Introduction [excerpt] My thesis will argue that [Jane] Austen remains a critical rhetorical voice, one that has been reinvented through the centuries up to the present day and is still relevant and being reinterpreted currently. Essentially, I hope to contribute to the project of understanding the emerging "rhetorical self" of Austen, by building on the work of James Kastely, alongside others, in order to claim that there is still more we can learn about Jane Austen, and ourselves, by exploring how...
Dates: 2017