Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface
- 1 ‘Launched Upon the Sea of Moral and Political Inquiry’: The Ethical Experiments of the Romantic Novel
- 2 Bad Marriages, Bad Novels: The ‘Philosophical Romance’
- 3 Enlightenment or Illumination: The Spectre of Conspiracy in Gothic Fictions of the 1790s
- 4 Burney's Conservatism: Masculine Value and ‘the Ingenuous Cecilia’
- 5 ‘All Agog to Find Her Out’: Compulsory Narration in The Wanderer
- 6 A Select Collection: Barbauld, Scott, and the Rise of the (Reprinted) Novel
- 7 Austen, Empire and Moral Virtue
- 8 Fanny Price's British Museum: Empire, Genre, and Memory in Mansfield Park
- 9 Between the Lines: Poetry, Persuasion, and the Feelings of the Past
- 10 Scholarly Revivals: Gothic Fiction, Secret History, and Hogg's Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner
- 11 Sympathy, Physiognomy, and Scottish Romantic Fiction
- Works Cited
- Index
2 - Bad Marriages, Bad Novels: The ‘Philosophical Romance’
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface
- 1 ‘Launched Upon the Sea of Moral and Political Inquiry’: The Ethical Experiments of the Romantic Novel
- 2 Bad Marriages, Bad Novels: The ‘Philosophical Romance’
- 3 Enlightenment or Illumination: The Spectre of Conspiracy in Gothic Fictions of the 1790s
- 4 Burney's Conservatism: Masculine Value and ‘the Ingenuous Cecilia’
- 5 ‘All Agog to Find Her Out’: Compulsory Narration in The Wanderer
- 6 A Select Collection: Barbauld, Scott, and the Rise of the (Reprinted) Novel
- 7 Austen, Empire and Moral Virtue
- 8 Fanny Price's British Museum: Empire, Genre, and Memory in Mansfield Park
- 9 Between the Lines: Poetry, Persuasion, and the Feelings of the Past
- 10 Scholarly Revivals: Gothic Fiction, Secret History, and Hogg's Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner
- 11 Sympathy, Physiognomy, and Scottish Romantic Fiction
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
Mr S[elby]. […] Adsheart! we shall have a double marriage, as sure as two and two make four. […]
The Curtain Falls – Jane Austen, Sir Charles Grandison or The Happy Man: A Comedy in Five Acts (written 1799)Written just after Austen had completed her first draft of Pride and Prejudice, this sentence attests to what remains the same in the novel genre as it is transformed towards the end of the eighteenth century into a vehicle for psychological realism. Clearly, Austen had figured out by the time she co-authored this dramatic adaptation of Richardson's novel that good marriages make good novels, just as they end comic plays. The satisfaction is not simply aesthetic. An ending via double marriage ensures that two and two make four; it conserves or perhaps even creates cultural rationality, the kinds of reasoning that a particular social order recognizes as indisputable. John Stevenson reminds us that, in Northrop Frye's generic theory, the distinctive feature of ‘comedy’ in the broadest sense of the term is ‘that a concluding marriage offers its audience an image of restored social order’, containing the anarchic sexual energies that had threatened its dissolution.
Austen's contemporaries, the ‘female Jacobin’ authors Mary Hays and Mary Wollstonecraft, of course much lamented the social order. If marriage is a way of rejoining and reaffirming the world as currently constituted, it offers no solution to their demand for change.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Recognizing the Romantic NovelNew Histories of British Fiction, 1780-1830, pp. 49 - 76Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2010