Isabelle de Charrière, Jane Austen, and Post-Enlightenment Fiction: Writing the Shared Humanity of Men and Women

This article analyses Isabelle de Charrière and Jane Austen together in relation to the changing perception of humanity affecting European thinking at the end of the eighteenth century. Not only is Charrière’s rather lesser-known work likely to benefit from the comparison, but Austen’s novels also g...

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Main Author: Valérie Cossy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2022-12-01
Series:Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/11/6/150
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author Valérie Cossy
author_facet Valérie Cossy
author_sort Valérie Cossy
collection DOAJ
description This article analyses Isabelle de Charrière and Jane Austen together in relation to the changing perception of humanity affecting European thinking at the end of the eighteenth century. Not only is Charrière’s rather lesser-known work likely to benefit from the comparison, but Austen’s novels also gain in philosophical depth when read alongside hers. Each one an outsider in her own world, Charrière and Austen wrote against the grain of inherited gender prejudices but also against the growing conservatism of binary orthodoxy around 1800. Adopting as writers a perspective freed from ‘feminine’ expectations, as opposed to the lady novelist embodied by the famous Isabelle de Montolieu, they endeavoured to invent characters and stories distinct from the pervasive definitions of the feminine and the masculine, giving readers the possibility of considering the shared humanity equally shaping men and women.
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spelling doaj.art-d2309429724440388757ac9b8841da8e2023-11-24T15:17:10ZengMDPI AGHumanities2076-07872022-12-0111615010.3390/h11060150Isabelle de Charrière, Jane Austen, and Post-Enlightenment Fiction: Writing the Shared Humanity of Men and WomenValérie Cossy0Centre Interdisciplinaire D’étude des Littératures, Université de Lausanne, 1015 Lausanne, SwitzerlandThis article analyses Isabelle de Charrière and Jane Austen together in relation to the changing perception of humanity affecting European thinking at the end of the eighteenth century. Not only is Charrière’s rather lesser-known work likely to benefit from the comparison, but Austen’s novels also gain in philosophical depth when read alongside hers. Each one an outsider in her own world, Charrière and Austen wrote against the grain of inherited gender prejudices but also against the growing conservatism of binary orthodoxy around 1800. Adopting as writers a perspective freed from ‘feminine’ expectations, as opposed to the lady novelist embodied by the famous Isabelle de Montolieu, they endeavoured to invent characters and stories distinct from the pervasive definitions of the feminine and the masculine, giving readers the possibility of considering the shared humanity equally shaping men and women.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/11/6/150Jane AustenIsabelle de CharrièreIsabelle de Montolieugenderhumanityfiction
spellingShingle Valérie Cossy
Isabelle de Charrière, Jane Austen, and Post-Enlightenment Fiction: Writing the Shared Humanity of Men and Women
Humanities
Jane Austen
Isabelle de Charrière
Isabelle de Montolieu
gender
humanity
fiction
title Isabelle de Charrière, Jane Austen, and Post-Enlightenment Fiction: Writing the Shared Humanity of Men and Women
title_full Isabelle de Charrière, Jane Austen, and Post-Enlightenment Fiction: Writing the Shared Humanity of Men and Women
title_fullStr Isabelle de Charrière, Jane Austen, and Post-Enlightenment Fiction: Writing the Shared Humanity of Men and Women
title_full_unstemmed Isabelle de Charrière, Jane Austen, and Post-Enlightenment Fiction: Writing the Shared Humanity of Men and Women
title_short Isabelle de Charrière, Jane Austen, and Post-Enlightenment Fiction: Writing the Shared Humanity of Men and Women
title_sort isabelle de charriere jane austen and post enlightenment fiction writing the shared humanity of men and women
topic Jane Austen
Isabelle de Charrière
Isabelle de Montolieu
gender
humanity
fiction
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/11/6/150
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