“Comedy in its Worst Form”? Seduced and Seductive Heroines in “A Simple Story”, “Lover’s Vows”, and “Mansfield Park”

The intertextual relationship between Mansfield Park and Das Kind der Liebe by August von Kotzebue (1790), adapted by Elizabeth Inchbald into Lovers’ Vows (1798) has been the object of intense critical scrutiny. The role of the theatricals within the novel, the correspondence between themes and char...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Carlotta Farese
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Prof. Rinaldo Rinaldi 2017-12-01
Series:Parole Rubate : Rivista Internazionale di Studi sulla Citazione
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.parolerubate.unipr.it/fascicolo16_pdf/F16_3_farese_comedy.pdf
Description
Summary:The intertextual relationship between Mansfield Park and Das Kind der Liebe by August von Kotzebue (1790), adapted by Elizabeth Inchbald into Lovers’ Vows (1798) has been the object of intense critical scrutiny. The role of the theatricals within the novel, the correspondence between themes and characters of the two texts, Austen’s attitude towards the theatre in general and this famously controversial play in particular have been discussed at length in a series of scholarly contributions. However, these issues have only occasionally been examined in the context of a possible more general relationship to the work of the author who translated and adapted Kotzebue’s play for the English stage: Elizabeth Inchbald. This paper will take precisely this approach focusing in particular on the links connecting Inchbald’s first novel (A Simple Story), Lover’s Vows and Mansfield Park. It will argue that many aspects of Austen’s novel recall A Simple Story, and it will show how bringing this novel into the picture would enhance our understanding of Austen’s intertextual practices and shed new light on the subtle dialectics she establishes with her sources by questioning and revising the thematic, ideological, and formal features of different genres.
ISSN:2039-0114