Partly because I am trying to show off the pretty handouts I have created using Apple iWorks’s Pages, and partly because I wanted to try out Issuu, here is a collection of handouts for British literature. Open publication – Free publishing – More writing Open publication – Free publishing – More writing Open publication – [...]
Entries Tagged as 'sense and sensibility'
Pretty British Literature Handouts
July 7th, 2010 · 16 Comments · Teaching Literature, Tools
Tags: british literature·chaucer·courtly love·handouts·issuu·jane austen·macbeth·pride and prejudice·sense and sensibility·shakespeare
Accessing Austen Part 4: Old Maids and Entailments
July 27th, 2008 · 4 Comments · Teaching Literature
When students read Pride and Prejudice, they often have difficulty understanding why Mr. Collins will inherit Mr. Bennet’s estate when he has five daughters who might inherit. They also wonder why Elizabeth would be encouraged to marry her cousin, Mr. Collins. That’s just … ew … right? The answer to both of these mysteries is, [...]
Tags: emma·entailment·jane austen·marriage·northanger abbey·persuasion·pride and prejudice·sense and sensibility
Accessing Austen Part 3: Manners, Manners
July 20th, 2008 · Comments Off · Teaching Literature
In reading Jane Austen, one of the things I think students might find most foreign is the very different sense of propriety. Manners and customs were quite different from our own time as evidenced in her novels. The first thing students might notice is that her characters tend to refer to each other as Mr. [...]
Tags: jane austen·manners·pride and prejudice·sense and sensibility
Accessing Austen: How Rich Was Mr. Darcy?
June 18th, 2008 · 3 Comments · Teaching Literature, Uncategorized
Quite apart from reading and appreciating Jane Austen’s language, it has been my experience that students have difficulty understanding her world. For example, is Mr. Darcy really rich? After all, £10,000 doesn’t sound like a lot of money. What’s a pelisse anyway? What’s with all the letter writing? What’s up with all the tea? Of [...]
Tags: jane austen·mr. darcy·pride and prejudice·sense and sensibility




