Affiliation:
1. San Diego State University
Abstract
ABSTRACT
This article presents the case that the perspective on taste set forth in Hugh Blair’s Lectures on Rhetoric and Belles Lettres significantly influenced Jane Austen’s novel Sense and Sensibility. Austen’s version of the Scots’s concepts—sense, sensibility, understanding, feeling, delicacy, correctness, and so forth—features the tendency in individuals of taste to favor either sense or sensibility, as well as the novelist’s decided tilt toward the former. Despite her inclination toward sense, however, Austen ultimately follows Blair in characterizing these faculties as complementary and cooperative, rather than competitive or oppositional. Just as Lectures provides potential insight into Sense and Sensibility, so, correspondingly, study of Austen’s novel provides a better understanding of Blair and his influence.
Publisher
The Pennsylvania State University Press
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Linguistics and Language,Communication,Language and Linguistics
Reference46 articles.
1. The Civic Function of Taste: A Re-Assessment of Hugh Blair’s Rhetorical Theory;Agnew;Rhetoric Society Quarterly,1998
2. “Blair’s Rhetoric and the Art of Persuasion;Bander;” Persuasions,1993
3. The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: Reading Character in Sense and Sensibility;Bander;Persuasions On-Line,2011