Jane Austen's free indirect style : a linguistic ethnography

This study assesses the relationship between the diffusion of free indirect discourse and the decline of the British epistolary novel in the late-eighteenth and early-nineteenth centuries. Studying the works of a single stylist, Jane Austen, and her engagement with the mobility of the letter genre...

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Main Author: Wajsberg, Jeffrey
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/40337
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-403372018-01-05T17:25:37Z Jane Austen's free indirect style : a linguistic ethnography Wajsberg, Jeffrey This study assesses the relationship between the diffusion of free indirect discourse and the decline of the British epistolary novel in the late-eighteenth and early-nineteenth centuries. Studying the works of a single stylist, Jane Austen, and her engagement with the mobility of the letter genre at the turn of the century, it synthesizes literary-historical, linguistic, and narratological perspectives on discourse representation in order to evaluate claims that Austen was the “pioneer” of this free indirect style, and to comment on how her simultaneous shift in genre from the first-person epistolary mode to third-person classical realism informs that style’s development. Arts, Faculty of English, Department of Graduate 2012-01-27T18:02:02Z 2012-01-27T18:02:02Z 2012 2012-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/40337 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ University of British Columbia
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language English
sources NDLTD
description This study assesses the relationship between the diffusion of free indirect discourse and the decline of the British epistolary novel in the late-eighteenth and early-nineteenth centuries. Studying the works of a single stylist, Jane Austen, and her engagement with the mobility of the letter genre at the turn of the century, it synthesizes literary-historical, linguistic, and narratological perspectives on discourse representation in order to evaluate claims that Austen was the “pioneer” of this free indirect style, and to comment on how her simultaneous shift in genre from the first-person epistolary mode to third-person classical realism informs that style’s development. === Arts, Faculty of === English, Department of === Graduate
author Wajsberg, Jeffrey
spellingShingle Wajsberg, Jeffrey
Jane Austen's free indirect style : a linguistic ethnography
author_facet Wajsberg, Jeffrey
author_sort Wajsberg, Jeffrey
title Jane Austen's free indirect style : a linguistic ethnography
title_short Jane Austen's free indirect style : a linguistic ethnography
title_full Jane Austen's free indirect style : a linguistic ethnography
title_fullStr Jane Austen's free indirect style : a linguistic ethnography
title_full_unstemmed Jane Austen's free indirect style : a linguistic ethnography
title_sort jane austen's free indirect style : a linguistic ethnography
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/40337
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