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008 960501s1995 enk b 000 1 eng u
010 _a 94045392
020 _a0192824325
035 _a(Sirsi) ALT-3857
035 _a04044
035 0 _fISM
035 0 0 _iBIBBIN/AAD-6207/HMALHOTR
040 _aDLC
_cDLC
_dAEU
043 _ae-uk-en
050 0 0 _aPR4034
_b.E5 1995
060 _bAE
082 0 0 _a823.7
_220
084 _a823.7
_bAE
090 _aPR 4043 E5 1995
_bACAL
090 0 _aPR 4034 E5 1995
_bAEU
100 1 _aAusten, Jane,
_d1775-1817.
245 1 0 _aEmma
_h[Book /]
_cJane Austen ; edited by James Kinsley ; with an introduction by Terry Castle.
260 _aOxford ;
_aNew York :
_bOxford University Press,
_c1995.
300 _a229 p ;
_c20 cm.
490 1 _aThe World's classics
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references (p. [xxxi]-xxxv).
520 _aEmma (1816) is Jane Austen's most characteristic work. Convinced that she understands the world, Emma rules over her invalid father and the small social circle of Highbury with well-meaning tyranny. But she is highly fallible where love is concerned, and her failings there cause many misunderstandings - as well as giving the reader much enjoyment as order is restored. In her new introduction to this edition Terry Castle examines the pleasure given by Emma's reassuringly stable world and by its comedy, and examines the relationships, imagery, and continuing power of Austen's perhaps greatest novel.
596 _a16
650 0 _aYoung women
_zEngland
_xFiction.
651 0 _aEngland
_xSocial life and customs
_y19th century
_xFiction.
700 1 _aKinsley, James.
830 0 _aWorld's classics.
926 _aUAAUG
_bMAINSTACKS
_cPR 4043 E5 1995
_dBOOK
_f1
001 0000053064
003 0000
942 _cBK
942 _cBK
942 _cBK
999 _c34357
_d34357