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I’ve tried Japanese walking, mindful walking, and “hot girl” walking (read: normal walking, given a catchy name for ...
Whether you spend your weekends marathoning K-Drama or consider yourself an authority on that iconic Mr. Darcy hand flex, ...
The show’s title, curator Dale Stinchcomb told Observer, is a nod to variations of a phrase that appears in several of Jane ...
Catherine Morland is second only to Elizabeth Bennet in being Austen’s most easily appealing heroine. While she lacks Elizabeth’s wit and confidence, ...
Catherine Morland asks in Jane Austen’s “Northanger Abbey” (1817). And who indeed could ever be tired of the Royal Crescent (completed 1775), ...
But which ones will make you “dance in your chair” like Catherine Morland? Is it a problem if these adaptations veer from the source material? I’d argue no.
Jane Austen was a master of the genre: In her posthumously published novel Northanger Abbey, she satirizes the overly imaginative Catherine Morland, a voracious reader who perceives her life as a ...
(See: the 19th-century trend of silly female characters contracting brain rot from reading, which Jane Austen hilariously skewered with Northanger Abbey’s Catherine Morland.) ...
So says Henry Tilney to Catherine Morland, the hero and heroine respectively of Jane Austen's northanger abbey (completed 1803, published posthumously in 1817). It is a neat summation of the ...
There is, we are assured, “nothing heroic” about our protagonist Catherine Morland. She prefers cricket to dolls, riding to reading, and would rather steal flowers than water them; ...