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Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2013

Pages: 50-66

ISBN (Hardback): 9781349344536

Full citation:

Mary Spongberg, ""All histories are against you?"", in: Reading historical fiction, Berlin, Springer, 2013

"All histories are against you?"

family history, domestic history and the feminine past in northanger abbey and persuasion

Mary Spongberg

pp. 50-66

in: Käte Mitchell, Nicola Parsons (eds), Reading historical fiction, Berlin, Springer, 2013

Abstract

The famous exchange between Anne Elliot, the heroine of Persuasion, and Captain Harville, where he asserts that "all histories are against you', has become for many the key to understanding Jane Austen's particular view of history. Most critics contend that Anne Elliot is voicing the view of the mature Austen, an author at the height of her powers, well placed to defend feminine modes of narration. Reading Anne Elliot's statements as Austen's views usually involves comparing Anne's opinions with those of Austen's "first' heroine, Catherine Morland, who decried "real solemn history' in Northanger Abbey. While certain critics have identified in Catherine Morland a refusal on the young Austen's part to take history seriously, the words of Anne Elliot have been read as a passionate refusal of masculinist history. As Stuart Curran has astutely observed, Anne's "sharp observation […] has often been taken as a characteristically oblique expression' of Austen's "feminism as well as a defense of her singular craft' (1993, 177).

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2013

Pages: 50-66

ISBN (Hardback): 9781349344536

Full citation:

Mary Spongberg, ""All histories are against you?"", in: Reading historical fiction, Berlin, Springer, 2013