This book makes connections between selfhood, reading practice and moral judgment which propose fresh insights into Austenâs narrative style and offer new ways of reading her work. It grounds her writing in the Enlightenment philosophy of selfhood, exploring how Austen takes five major components of selfhood theoryâmemory, imagination, probability, sympathy and reflectionâand investigates their relation to self-formation and moral judgement. At the same time, Austenâs narrative style breaks new ground in the representation of consciousness and engages directly with contemporary concerns about reading practice. Drawing analogies between reading text and reading character, the book argues that Austenâs rendering of reading and rereading as both reflective and constitutive acts demonstrates their capacity to enable self-recognition and self-formation. It shows how Austen raises questions about the potential for different readings and, in so doing, challenges her readers to reflect on and reread their own interactions with her texts.
Price history
Nov 5, 2022
€133.21