Showing 81 - 100 results of 112 for search '"Pride and Prejudice"', query time: 0.13s Refine Results
  1. 81

    Bits of Ivory on the Silver Screen: Austen in Multimodal Quotation and Translation by Massimiliano Morini

    Published 2017-12-01
    “…In particular, I am going to concentrate on two relatively recent versions of Pride and Prejudice (the 1995 BBC version and the 2005 film) and one of Sense and Sensibility (done in 1995 by celebrated director Ang Lee).…”
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    Article
  2. 82

    The Role of Educational Institutions in Educating Muslims Nowadays on Sticking to the Ethical Principles when Thay Have Different Points of View. by Mahmoud Yosif Mohammad Mahmoud

    Published 2008-09-01
    “…Supporting the others' different viewtoints . Avoiding pride and prejudice is also important.…”
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    Article
  3. 83

    <b>Going beyond "First Impressions": Jane Austen on the spotlight</b><br> by Carla Alexandra Ferreira

    Published 2010-03-01
    “…In order to illustrate our point the 2005 version of Pride and Prejudice for the cinema will be used.…”
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    Article
  4. 84

    Stative verbs in English language and their translation of equivalents in Serbian language by Tomić Jovana D.

    Published 2018-01-01
    “…Examples that are dealt with in the paper are taken from the novel Pride and Prejudice, by British author, Jane Austen. Verbs are not studied in isolation, but in context, therefore the same verb can have different meanings depending on the context. …”
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    Article
  5. 85

    De Lost in Austen à Lost Austen ? Une réflexion sur l’élaboration d’une fiction transfuge by Claire Colin

    Published 2017-04-01
    “…This paper deals with the four-part 2008 British television series Lost in Austen, written from a Guy Andrews’s screenplay and directed by Dan Zeff, as an adaptation of the popular Jane Austen’s novel Pride and Prejudice. Instead of being a simple recreation which would be characterized by nonsense, this series can rather suggest a reflection about how to create an “escapist fiction,” according to the Richard Saint-Gelais’s phrase (here translated). …”
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    Article
  6. 86

    Anglicization of the French Language and Gallicization of the English Language at the Level of a Phraseological System by Taisiya I. Skorobogatova, Tatyana A. Shkuratova

    Published 2019-03-01
    “…This article is a continuation of the authors’ research, the first results of which were published in the article “Pride and Prejudice”: the Anglicization of the French Language and the Gallicization of the English Language (2018). …”
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    Article
  7. 87

    A Pragma-Syntactic Study of Vocative in Selected English Novels by Hussein Al-Hassnawi, Hussein Ibrahim

    Published 2023-09-01
    “… This paper attempts to investigate the syntactic-pragmatic relationship associated with vocative use in two English novels–namely, Austen’s Pride and Prejudice (1813) and Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises (1926). …”
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    Article
  8. 88

    There Are Six Bodies in This Relationship: An Anthropological Approach to the Romance Genre by Laura Vivanco, Kyra Kramer

    Published 2010-08-01
    “…The primary texts cited span a period of over 200 years and include classics such as Samuel Richardson’s Pamela (1740) and Austen’s Pride and Prejudice (1813) as well as a range of more recent category and single-title romances. …”
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    Article
  9. 89

    Queer African literary communities: The anthology as political genre by Christopher W. Koekemoer

    Published 2024-02-01
    “…The inaugural Gerald Kraak anthology titled Pride and Prejudice (The Gerald Kraak Anthology: African Perspectives on Gender, Social Justice and Sexuality) (2017) is a collection of poetry, fiction, journalism, photography, and scholarly writing that focuses on queer and other marginalised identities in Africa. …”
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    Article
  10. 90

    Lifelong learning opportunities for professional women in Bangladesh: to what extent does patriarchy act as a barrier? by Pervin, Nasrin, Mokhtar, Mahani

    Published 2023
    “…In the novel ‘Pride and Prejudice’, Austen (1813) wanted to show the marginal or subaltern standing of a woman in the 18th century England by saying that a woman was always subservient to a man, and the sole identity of a woman was being a wife to a male at that time. …”
    Article
  11. 91

    Jane Austen in the 1940 silver screen: screwball comedy, translation and manipulation. by Ricelly Jáder Bezerra da Silva

    Published 2017-09-01
    “…This article aims at analyzing the adaptation of Pride and Prejudice, first published in 1813, by the English author Jane Austen, to the eponymous film directed by Robert Z. …”
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    Article
  12. 92

    DE REMAKES, ZOMBIS Y TRADICIÓN(ES): EL CASO DEL LAZARILLO Z. MATAR ZOMBIS NUNCA FUE PAN COMIDO by RAÚL MOLINA GIL

    Published 2015-07-01
    “…Tras la publicación de Pride and Prejudice and Zombies (Seth Grahame-Smith, 2009), surge un nuevo movimiento literario basado en la reescritura de los clásicos a partir de la inclusión de zombis en las tramas. …”
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    Article
  13. 93

    Time-Travel to P&P: Web-based Chinese Fanfic of Jane Austen by Jin Feng

    Published 2020-03-01
    “…The fan fiction (fanfic) works of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice (P & P) on the Chinese web unanimously deploy time-travel to insert Chinese men or women into the canon universe. …”
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    Article
  14. 94

    Revolutionary no more : the disempowering effect of marriage on classic literary heroines. by Chia, Valerie Ying En.

    Published 2013
    “…Aside from their status as canonical works of English Literature and bestselling blockbusters of their time, another element uniting Samuel Richardson’s Pamela (1740), Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice (1813), and Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre (1847), is their focus on courtship and marriage from a female perspective. …”
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    Final Year Project (FYP)
  15. 95

    The Use of Literary Adaptations in the EFL Classroom: A Case Study by Chahra Beloufa

    Published 2023-10-01
    “…In their British Literature classroom, one projected "Pride and Prejudice," Austen's film adaptation (2005), to observe students' abilities in criticizing the Film and discussing it and to discover to what extent it will make them eager to read the novel and get engaged. …”
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  16. 96

    Directive Speech Acts and Hedges Presented by Female Main Characters of Jane Austen’s Novels by Citra Suryanovika, Novita Julhijah

    Published 2018-11-01
    “…This research aimed at identifying the category of directive speech acts found in the utterances of six female characters of six Jane Austen’s novels (Elinor Dashwood of Sense and Sensibility, Elizabeth Bennet of Pride and Prejudice, Fanny Price of Mansfield Park, Emma Woodhouse of Emma, Anne Elliot of Persuasion, and Catherine Morland of Northanger Abbey), and explaining the hedges used in directive speech acts. …”
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    Article
  17. 97

    Orgoglio e Pregiudizio : dal romanzo alla graphic novel by Anna Maria Patrucco

    Published 2018-11-01
    “…L’article analysera le roman graphique de la transposition de Pride and Prejudice, en mettant l’accent sur la médiation nécessaire qui doit avoir lieu dans un travail similaire entre le genre du roman et celui de la bande dessinée. …”
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    Article
  18. 98

    Empowerment of love for Jane Austen's Females: a case of creativity in familiarity by Alhasan, Assia, Omar, Noritah

    Published 2020
    “…The goal of this qualitative study is to explore unfamiliar concepts presented in familiar contexts in Austen’s Pride and Prejudice (1813) and Mansfield Park (1814). Also, it intends to examine Austen's creativity in unfamiliar concepts such as women's freedom of choice and education from a feminist perspective. …”
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    Article
  19. 99

    A literary work as self-reflection of the author: Why and how it is manifested by Idha Nurhamidah, Sugeng Purwanto, Nur Ekaningsih

    Published 2019-09-01
    “…In this study, a novel entitled “Pride and Prejudice” by Jane Austen (1813) was investigated to justify that the author (Austen) reflected herself in one of the characters in the novel. …”
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    Article
  20. 100

    Race and ethnicity in South African urban history: A call to investigate “mingling” as well as “separation” in the city by Vivian Bickford-Smith

    Published 2021-12-01
    “…Mingling means the crossing of potentially rigid boundaries of group pride and prejudice that can accompany such self-identification and/or imposed categorisation, even if many doing the crossing could still retain a racial or ethnic identity among their other self-identities. …”
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