Reengineering class hierarchies using concept analysis

Author(s):  
Gregor Snelting ◽  
Frank Tip
2010 ◽  
Vol 52 (11) ◽  
pp. 1167-1187 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriela Arévalo ◽  
Stéphane Ducasse ◽  
Silvia Gordillo ◽  
Oscar Nierstrasz

1998 ◽  
Vol 23 (6) ◽  
pp. 99-110 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregor Snelting ◽  
Frank Tip

Author(s):  
Pam Morris

Persuasion overtly foregrounds the self as embodied: physical accidents and sickness are recurrent. Sir Walter Eliot’s belief in the time-defying bodily grace of nobility is subject to Austen’s harshest irony. The transition from vertically ordered place to horizontal space in Persuasion is more extreme than in any other of the completed novels. Anne Elliot’s movement from social exclusiveness to socially inclusive possibility allows Austen to challenge gender and class hierarchies traditionally held to be inborn. Her writerly experimentation expands the possibilities of narrative perspective to encompass the porous boundaries of the physical, the emotional and the rational that constitute any moment of consciousness. Her focalisation techniques in the text look directly towards Woolf’s stylist innovations. A chain of references to guns and shooting gathers into the novel contentious contemporary discursive networks on class relations, notions of masculinity and the nature of creaturely life.


Author(s):  
Elizabeth Gwaza ◽  
Veronica Maluwa ◽  
Esnath Kapito ◽  
Betty Sakala ◽  
Ruth Mwale ◽  
...  
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