Jane Austen and the Fiction of Culture
An Essay on the Narration of Social Realities
Richard Handler author Daniel Segal author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:3rd Nov '99
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With a new introduction by the authors, this paperback edition of Jane Austen and the Fiction of Culture takes the complete body of work of a major novelist as the basis for rethinking ethnographic representation and cross-cultural analysis.
Authors Handler and Segal have approached Jane Austen's writing as a source for interpreting the cultural ideology of kinship, social rank, courtship, and marriage in Austen's England. Arguing against the conventional reading of Austen as portrayer and upholder of a well-ordered society, they evaluate the rhetorical techniques that make Austen an effective ethnographer of diverse, though intertwined social realities. They show that Austen undercuts any and all claims to "truth universally acknowledged"—that is, to objective, positive knowledge of human affairs.
Jane Austen and the Fiction of Culture invites the reader to confront an ethnography of another time and place whose insights have a direct bearing on contemporary concerns in the humanities and human sciences.
This is an extraordinarily stimulating book—not least because the authors require the reader to confront an ethnographer of another time and another place whose own insights translate directly into contemporary concerns. Its core is one of Jane Austen's great insights: that significant observation does not require a vast canvas—it requires, simply but rigorously, the capacity to make what one observes signify. -- Marilyn Strathern, University of Manchester
ISBN: 9780847690480
Dimensions: 229mm x 149mm x 14mm
Weight: 304g
200 pages