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| Título : |
Pride and prejudice : Revised and Updated Bibliography |
| Tipo de documento: |
texto impreso |
| Autores: |
Jane Austen, Autor ; Joann Morse, Autor de un colofón, etc |
| Editorial: |
New York : Signet Classic |
| Fecha de publicación: |
1961 |
| Número de páginas: |
331 p |
| ISBN/ISSN/DL: |
978-0-451-52365-5 |
| Idioma : |
Inglés (eng) |
| Clasificación: |
Literatura :Literatura británica
|
| Etiquetas: |
LITERATURA INGLESA NOVELAS ROMANTICISMO |
| Clasificación: |
82-31(410)=111 Novelas. Literatura de Gran Bretaña en inglés |
| Resumen: |
The romantic clash of two opinionated young people provides the sustaining theme of Pride and Prejudic Vivacious Elizabeth Bennet is fascinated and repelled by the arrogant Mr. Darcy, whose condescending airs and acrid tongue have alienated her entire family. Their spirited courtship is conducted against a background of assembly-ball flirtations and drawing-room intrigues. Jane Austen's famous novel captures the affectations of class-conscious 18th century English families with matrimonial aims and rivalries. Her people are universal; they live a truth beyond time, change, or caricature. George Eliot called Jane Austen "the greatest artist that has ever written," and Sir Walter Scott wrote of her work, "There is a truth of painting in her writings which always delights me."
With an Afterword by Joann Morse |
| Link: |
./index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=42050 |
Pride and prejudice : Revised and Updated Bibliography [texto impreso] / Jane Austen, Autor ; Joann Morse, Autor de un colofón, etc . - New York : Signet Classic, 1961 . - 331 p. ISBN : 978-0-451-52365-5 Idioma : Inglés ( eng) | Clasificación: |
Literatura :Literatura británica
|
| Etiquetas: |
LITERATURA INGLESA NOVELAS ROMANTICISMO |
| Clasificación: |
82-31(410)=111 Novelas. Literatura de Gran Bretaña en inglés |
| Resumen: |
The romantic clash of two opinionated young people provides the sustaining theme of Pride and Prejudic Vivacious Elizabeth Bennet is fascinated and repelled by the arrogant Mr. Darcy, whose condescending airs and acrid tongue have alienated her entire family. Their spirited courtship is conducted against a background of assembly-ball flirtations and drawing-room intrigues. Jane Austen's famous novel captures the affectations of class-conscious 18th century English families with matrimonial aims and rivalries. Her people are universal; they live a truth beyond time, change, or caricature. George Eliot called Jane Austen "the greatest artist that has ever written," and Sir Walter Scott wrote of her work, "There is a truth of painting in her writings which always delights me."
With an Afterword by Joann Morse |
| Link: |
./index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=42050 |
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