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Mansfield Park

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    Acknowledgments ix (2)
    Introduction xi
    Jane Austen and Mansfield Park xi (2)
    A Note on Money in Austen's Novels xiii(3)
    A Note on Austen and the Text of Mansfield Park xvi
    The Text of Mansfield Park 1 (326)
    Map of England 2 (1)
    Facsimile title page 3 (2)
    Mansfield Park 5 (318)
    Textual Notes 323 (4)
    Contexts 327 (86)
    Elizabeth Inchbald
    Lovers' Vows (1798) 329 (46)
    Jane Austen
    Opinions of Mansfield Park (1814, 1815) 375 (4)
    Evening Prayer No. I 379 (1)
    A Companion to the Altar 380 (2)
    On Family Prayer 380 (2)
    Humphrey Repton
    Sketches and Hints on Landscape Gardening 382 (4)
    (1795)
    From Chapter III. Proper Situations for a 382 (4)
    House
    Observations on the Theory and Practice of 386 (1)
    Landscape Gardening (1803)
    From Chapter VII. Farm and Park Distinct 386 (1)
    Objects
    William Cowper
    The Task (1785) 387 (4)
    From Book I. The Sofa 387 (1)
    From Book III. The Garden 388 (3)
    John Gregory
    A Father's Legacy to His Daughter (1774) 391 (2)
    From Conduct and Behaviour 391 (2)
    From Amusements 393 (1)
    Mary Wollstonecraft
    A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792) 393 (5)
    From Chapter II. The Prevailing Opinion 393 (4)
    of a Sexual Character Discussed
    From Chapter III. The Same Subject 397 (1)
    Continued
    Thomas Gisborne
    An Enquiry into the Duties of Men in the 398 (3)
    Higher and Middle Classes of Society in
    Great Britain (1794)
    From Chapter XI. On the Duties of the 398 (3)
    Clerical Profession
    An Enquiry into the Duties of the Female 401 (3)
    Sex (1797)
    From Chapter IX. On Amusements in General 401 (1)
    From Chapter X. On the Employment of Time 402 (2)
    Hannah More
    Strictures on the Modern System of Female 404 (2)
    Education (1799)
    From Chapter VI. Filial Obedience Not the 404 (2)
    Character of the Age
    Parliamentary Debates (1806) 406 (3)
    From Abolition of the Slave Trade 406 (3)
    Thomas Clarkson
    From History of the... Abolition of the 409 (1)
    African Slave Trade... (1808)
    Elizabeth Inchbald
    Remarks on Shakespeare's King Henry VIII 410 (3)
    (1806-09)
    Criticism 413 (98)
    Jan Fergus
    Power and Mansfield Park 415 (8)
    Lionel Trilling
    Mansfield Park 423 (11)
    Alistair Duckworth
    Mansfield Park: Jane Austen's Grounds of 434 (11)
    Being
    Nina Auerbach
    Jane Austen's Dangerous Charm: Feeling as 445 (13)
    One Ought about Fanny Price
    Claudia L. Johnson
    Mansfield Park: Confusions of Guilt and 458 (18)
    Revolutions of Mind
    Joseph Litvak
    The Infection of Acting: Theatricals and 476 (14)
    Theatricality in Mansfield Park
    Edward Said
    Jane Austen and Empire 490 (3)
    Brian Southam
    The Silence of the Bertrams 493 (5)
    Joseph Lew
    "That Abominable Traffic": Mansfield Park 498 (13)
    and the Dynamics of Slavery
    Jane Austen: A Chronology 511 (2)
    Selected Bibliography 513

    Ã¥¼Ò°³

    Through Fanny Price, the heroine of Mansfield Park, Jane Austen views the social mores of her day and contemplates human nature itself. A shy and sweet-tempered girl adopted by wealthy relations, Fanny is an outsider looking in on an unfamiliar, and often inhospitable, world. But Fanny eventually wins the affection of her benefactors, endearing herself to the Bertram family and the reader alike. In her Introduction, Carol Shields writes, [Mansfield Park's] overriding theme is difficult to isolate, since the novel is about everything it touches upon: nurturing, steadfastness, belonging and not belonging, about fine gradations of moral persuasion, about human noise and silence, and about action and stillness.

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