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J. Thompson
Jane Austen and Modernization
Sociological Readings
1st ed. 2015. 2015. x, 211 S. 216 mm
Verlag/Jahr: SPRINGER PALGRAVE MACMILLAN; PALGRAVE MACMILLAN US 2015
ISBN: 1-349-50500-5 (1349505005)
Neue ISBN: 978-1-349-50500-5 (9781349505005)
Preis und Lieferzeit: Bitte klicken
Jane Austen wrote when sociology was being established as the new discipline to understand social issues such as urbanization and industrialization. Drawing on landmark sociologists such as Durkheim and Bourdieu, this study argues that the novels of Austen were heavily influenced by these early developments in sociology.
1. Introduction: Jane Austen and Modernization 2. Authority in Mansfield Park and Persuasion : Durkheim, Weber, and Parsons 3. Emma , Simmel, and Sociability 4. Pride and Prejudice , Goffman, and Strategic Interaction 5. Northanger Abbey , Sense and Sensibility , and Frame Analysis 6. Conclusion: History, Sociology, and Literature
"In addition to a new, interdisciplinary perspective on Jane Austenīs novels, Thompsonīs text is a tutorial in the work of six major sociological thinkers from the late-nineteenth to the mid-twentieth centuries. The book departs from the pattern of so many Austen studies by treating its texts, not in chronological order, but in pairs, as they best benefit from the context given by particular social theorists. These pairings bring out fresh readings, making the book a true delight. And Thompson certainly convinces us that it ītook sociology a century to catch up with Austenīs insight.ī" - Deborah Knuth Klenck, Professor of English, Colgate University, USA
"In this radically new way of thinking about Austen, James Thompson describes the ground shared by Austen and the foundational sociological thinkers - notably Simmel, Weber, and Goffman - producing invigorating reflections on the resonance between Austenīs representations of how people meet, converse, manifest themselves, and think about the other, Simmelīs theory of sociation, and how Goffman understands īsocial framesī in his The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life. The conclusion is a bravura display of how and why Austenīs work still speaks to the various modernizations being experienced in the world today." - Robert Clark, The Literary Encyclopedia
"Jane Austen and Modernization might be most accessible to more advanced students of Austen, since a familiarity with the novels and with the canon of Austen criticism is presumed. It would also be well suited to, as well as edifying for, scholars interested in cross-disciplinary studies, since it demonstrates both the potential pitfalls as well as the benefits of such analytical fusion." (Megan Taylor, Eighteenth-Century Fiction, Vol. 29 (1), 2016)
"In this radically new way of thinking about Austen, James Thompson describes the ground shared by Austen and the foundational sociological thinkers - notably Simmel, Weber, and Goffman - producing invigorating reflections on the resonance between Austenīs representations of how people meet, converse, manifest themselves, and think about the other, Simmelīs theory of sociation, and how Goffman understands īsocial framesī in his The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life. The conclusion is a bravura display of how and why Austenīs work still speaks to the various modernizations being experienced in the world today." - Robert Clark, The Literary Encyclopedia