Jane Austen and the Body
'The Picture of Health'

This book draws on modern theories of the body, and on eighteenth-century medical sources, to give a fresh and controversial reading of familiar texts.

John Wiltshire (Author)

9780521024990, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 16 March 2006

268 pages
21.5 x 14 x 1.7 cm, 0.35 kg

"John Wiltishire's analysis is both innovative and probing..." Judith Hattaway, English Language Notes

Jane Austen has been read as a novelist of manners, whose work discreetly avoids discussing the physical. John Wiltshire shows, on the contrary, how important are faces and bodies in her texts, from complainers and invalids like Mrs Bennet and Mr Woodhouse, to the frail, debilitated Fanny Price, the vulnerable Jane Fairfax, and the 'picture of health', Emma. Talk about health and illness in the novels is abundant, and constitutes community, but it also serves to disguise the operation of social and gender politics. Behind the medical paraphernalia and incidents are serious concerns with the nature of power as exerted through and on the body, and with the manifold meanings of illness. 'Nerves', 'spirits', and sensibility figure largely in these books, and Jane Austen is seen to offer a critique of the gendering power of illness and nursing or attendance upon illness. Drawing both on modern - medical and feminist - theories of illness and the body as well as on eighteenth-century medical sources to illuminate the novels, this book offers new and controversial, but also scholarly, readings of these familiar texts.

Acknowledgements
A note on texts
Introduction: Jane Austen and the body
1. Sense, sensibility and the proofs of affection
2. 'Eloquent blood': the coming out of Fanny Price
3. Emma: the picture of health
4. Persuasion: the pshychopathology of everyday life
5. Sanditon: the enjoyments of invalidism
Notes
Bibliography
Index.

Subject Areas: Literary studies: fiction, novelists & prose writers [DSK]