Sense and Sensibility: Love, Inheritance, and Social Satire in Regency England - Couverture souple

Austen, Jane

 
9788028333713: Sense and Sensibility: Love, Inheritance, and Social Satire in Regency England

Synopsis

Sense and Sensibility is a finely wrought novel of manners that follows the Dashwood sisters, Elinor and Marianne, as they negotiate love, loss, inheritance, and social constraint in late eighteenth-century England. Through the sisters' contrasting temperaments—Elinor's disciplined judgment and Marianne's ardent feeling—Austen examines the moral education required for happiness. Its elegant irony, precise dialogue, and subtle free indirect narration place it at the threshold between Augustan rationalism and Romantic sensibility. Jane Austen, writing from within the genteel yet economically precarious world she depicts, understood the pressures placed upon women whose security depended on marriage, property, and reputation. Her acute observation of family life, courtship rituals, and social performance informs the novel's critique of sentiment unchecked by prudence, as well as prudence emptied of warmth. First drafted as Elinor and Marianne, the work reflects Austen's early mastery of ethical comedy. This book is recommended to readers who value psychological nuance, social satire, and prose of extraordinary control. Sense and Sensibility rewards both first reading and rereading, offering a humane, intellectually rigorous portrait of feeling disciplined into wisdom.

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