Julie Bozza’s Reviews > The Cambridge Companion to Emma > Status Update
Julie Bozza
is on page 118 of 243
"... And if Emma turns so often on kindness, that is another reason why it is so exhilarating a novel. Jane Austen was fond of Emma and it shows, for Emma, like her heroine at her most vital, is filled with 'the real good-will of a mind delighted with its own ideas'."
— Jun 24, 2018 03:27PM
Like flag
Julie’s Previous Updates
Julie Bozza
is on page 140 of 243
"In making music the visible sign of Jane Fairfax's cultivation, sensitivity and highly wrought consciousness, Austen was doing something new. She was valuing music as art, as the outward manifestation of a largeness of soul - a combination of talent, deep feeling, serious application and intellectual acuity - rather than simply proof of obedience to custom, a modicum of discipline and a feminine desire to please."
— Jun 25, 2018 07:46AM
Julie Bozza
is on page 118 of 243
"The novel's cunning and original textual plots match the imaginative schemes, the creative play and invention of its characters. It is full of clever, entertaining and ultimately serious mischief, underpinned by sympathy for the challenges facing an intelligent and gifted young woman in ordinary, mundane society. ..."
— Jun 24, 2018 03:25PM
Julie Bozza
is on page 78 of 243
'As Michael Lewis, author of "Flash Boys" (2013), commented, "It's hard to dramatize the quotidian in a way that makes it fresh for readers. It's like describing the air we breathe." ... "The air we breathe" was Austen's gift to the novel.'
— Jun 21, 2018 10:22AM
Julie Bozza
is on page 24 of 243
"Austen felt the social and gender-related claustrophobia of her time as surely as Mary Wollstonecraft, although, unlike her revolutionary predecessor, she had no active desire fundamentally to replace that system; rather, her imagination offered her a means of bearing the unbearable, of outflanking and comically transfiguring the world she could not escape."
— Jun 18, 2018 07:51AM

