screenkvm.blogg.se

Reading Austen in America by Juliette Wells
Reading Austen in America by Juliette Wells











Reading Austen in America by Juliette Wells

Society member access to a journal is achieved in one of the following ways: If you cannot sign in, please contact your librarian. If your institution is not listed or you cannot sign in to your institution’s website, please contact your librarian or administrator.Įnter your library card number to sign in. Following successful sign in, you will be returned to Oxford Academic.Do not use an Oxford Academic personal account. When on the institution site, please use the credentials provided by your institution.Select your institution from the list provided, which will take you to your institution's website to sign in.Click Sign in through your institution.Shibboleth / Open Athens technology is used to provide single sign-on between your institution’s website and Oxford Academic.

Reading Austen in America by Juliette Wells

This authentication occurs automatically, and it is not possible to sign out of an IP authenticated account.Ĭhoose this option to get remote access when outside your institution. Typically, access is provided across an institutional network to a range of IP addresses.

Reading Austen in America by Juliette Wells

If you are a member of an institution with an active account, you may be able to access content in one of the following ways: Get help with access Institutional accessĪccess to content on Oxford Academic is often provided through institutional subscriptions and purchases. These connections range from the obvious – published reviews in foreign newspapers letters written to friends and relatives abroad – to the obscure: marriage contracts, pocket diaries, books from lending libraries, and bookbuyers’ catalogues these are just some of the forms of evidence used to examine the circulation of information during the nineteenth century, as well as the responses that Austen’s readers had to her work. For Juliette Wells in Reading Austen in America, and Sheila Johnson Kindred in Jane Austen’s Transatlantic Sister: The Life and Letters of Fanny Palmer Austen, this ease of travel forms the genesis for their research, as the two trace a network of Austen’s readers and relations across the eastern seaboard of nineteenth-century North America.

Reading Austen in America by Juliette Wells

‘I have crossed the Atlantic four times, and have been once to the East Indies, and back again and only once, besides being in different places about home – Cork, and Lisbon, and Gibraltar.’ 1 These words, spoken by the naval wife Mrs Croft in Persuasion, underscore the relative confidence with which early nineteenth-century travellers made their journeys overseas.













Reading Austen in America by Juliette Wells