-
Recent Posts
- Love = Need for Connection + Need for Survival + Bullshit
- Presidency
- Pulling the wings off M. Butterfly: Dramatic Irony, Performance and the Third Space in Hwang’s dramatic script and film adaptation
- Failing to Cope
- The Two Oroonokos
- Inventing Identities: Becoming a Mestiza in Julia Alvarez’s How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents and Esmeralda Santiago’s When I Was Puerto Rican
- An Investigation of Langston Hughes’ “Third Degree”
- Irony and Immortality: An Explication of A. E. Stallings’ “Arachne Gives Thanks to Athena”
- The Duty of Man in Austen’s Mansfield Park and Emma
- Critique of Last Child in the Woods
Categories
Tag Archives: marriage
Emma Woodhouse-Powerfully in Love
By Jessica Allen Jane Austen’s Emma, while essentially a marriage plot concerned with the niceties, formalities, and strictures of a hierarchical society, portrays a heroine vastly different from the majority of Austen’s female characters. From the opening paragraph of the … Continue reading
Posted in 300 Level Papers, Arts/Culture, Edition: Fall 2010, Gender
Tagged Emma, English, gender, Jane Austen, literature, love, marriage, Stetson, Woodhouse
Comments Off