So.....I am thinking of a novel by a famous English novelist which
contains ALL of the following TEN elements:
It has a married couple Mr. and Mrs. Norris.
Mrs. Norris has contempt for those who are enslaved (whether literally
or metaphorically).
Colonial slavery is mentioned at certain key points, but is not central
to the story.
There is a reference (which may or may not be explicit) to strange
business in America.
A man who plays on an organ, and children dance to his music.
Lord Mansfield’s 1772 Somersett decision is strongly hinted at but never
explicitly referred to.
Lord Mansfield’s real life is also strongly hinted at.
There is specific reference to the burning of books in anger.
The novelist alludes to Inchbald's Lovers Vows (but not necessarily in
the same novel as the rest of these ten elements)
There is an important character named Tom who is of an artistic nature.
So, what novel and novelist am I talking about?
(think before you answer)
Cheers, ARNIE
@JaneAustenCode on Twitter
Popular Posts
- Deirdre Le Faye & Me: "I am a scholar, she is a scholar: so far we are equal"
- Darcy's "We neither of us perform to strangers": a Radical New Interpretation
- The Hunger Games’s Veiled Allusion to Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus
- Rick Santorum would have been the worst person in the world to Jane Austen too!
- August Wayne Booth in Once Upon A Time: Jane Austen Really IS Everywhere in 2012!
- 20 shades of hero/villain Mr. Darcy
- Can Jane Austen forgive Marianne?
- Miss Bennet, Elizabeth, Lizzy, Eliza: who calls her what....and why
- The Great Gadsby: an overnight lesbian feminist ‘comedy’ sensation 10+ years in the making (& 3 millenia overdue)
- Austenland: The Movie was Fun, but the Novel was Better [SPOILER ALERT as to both]
Sunday, December 28, 2014
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment