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[(The Language of Jane Austen)] [Author: Professor Norman Page] published on

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Page's study of the language of Jane Austen demonstrates both the exceptional nature and the degree of subtlety of Jane Austen's use of language. As well as examining the staple items of her vocabulary and some of the characteristic patterns of her syntax, attention is paid to her use of dialogue and of the letter form.

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First published July 26, 2011

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Norman Page

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Author 7 books37 followers
March 18, 2018
This book has some interesting observations about Jane Austen's writing and prose style, but I'm still looking for a book which discusses the distinctive grammatical patterns and rhetorical tics of the 18th century which differ from ours. Page does mention the habit of writing things in triples: 'she looked, doubted, and was silenced' -- that sort of thing. He also points out that Austen has the dual quality of being a traditionalist (in her vocabulary and some of her syntax, such as "Do not, my dearest Elinor, let your kindness defend what I know your judgment must censure," and she was also a great innovator. Page mentions the "precision and control which are evident in every paragraph that Jane Austen wrote." So true! Austen's superior prose is the reason she hasn't been forgotten like so many other 18th century female novelists, so I would like to read more analysis of it.
I rented this book from Amazon.
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