Self-restriction in women of the nineteenth century manifested in dietary restrictions that paradoxically caused physical trauma while allowing women agency in their own bodies. Jane Austen’s heroines are affected by dietary manipulations at their own hands but none more than Fanny Price of Mansfield Park. Drawing from Anne-Lise François theory of the “open-secret” this thesis argues the paradoxical effects of self-starvation on Fanny Price and the mirroring self-denial of Austen’s narrative style which allowed for both author and character to create their own inhabitable spaces. This theory reflects on acts of self-denial in creating a place of autonomy through regressive actions for women faced with a lack of positive agency.
Subject
British and Irish literature;
British & Irish literature
Classification
0593: British and Irish literature
Identifier / keyword
Language, literature and linguistics; Austen, Jane; Eating disorder; Mansfield Park; Open-secret; Price, Fanny; Self-starvation
Title
Anorexic Austen: Issues of appetite and self-starvation in "Mansfield Park"
Author
Clark, Kaitlyn Elaine
Source
MAI 56/02M(E), Masters Abstracts International
Committee member
Bateman, Benjamin; Garrett, James
University/institution
California State University, Los Angeles
University location
United States -- California
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Document type
Dissertation/Thesis
Dissertation/thesis number
10245909
ProQuest document ID
1859912154
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/docview/1859912154