Tag Archives: Sense and Sensibility
“Jane Austen”
“Jane Austen” The Oxford philosopher Gilbert Ryle was once asked whether he read novels. He is supposed to have answered, “Yes, all six of them.” How is it that Jane Austen, the author of those six and quintessential novelist-of-women, had … Continue reading →
Posted in Academe, Art, Culture, Femininity, Gender Balance, Literature, nineteenth-century, relationships, Social Conventions, The Examined Life, The Problematic of Woman
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Tagged Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Bullying, coquetry, courtship, cynicism, Emma, Englishmen, feelings, Gilbert Ryle, girls, gossip, hard truths, Jane Austen, Literature, lying, Mansfield Park, Northanger Abbey, persona, Persuasion, Plato, Pride and Prejudice, principles, Sense and Sensibility, social space, tact, the novel, vulgarity, vulnerability, Women
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