Do Austen’s characters know they are white?: Persuasion chapter 10
How do we bring the lens of race to a story that seems to resist it?
The story in the story: Persuasion chapter 9
Austen deploys a miniature version of her main story question to show it in a different light.
The primary story question: Persuasion chapter 8
The story question is clear: Can two right-thinking people in a sea of fools navigate past their previous heartbreak to come together once more?
The power of information: Persuasion chapter 7
Learn how Austen uses point of view to create drama and suspense in a scene without much external action.
The plot thickens: Persuasion chapter 6
See the moment Austen activates a key backstory element to enliven the plot.
Suspenseful subplot: Persuasion chapter 5
Austen provides the dangerous Mrs Clay as a suspenseful subplot, not resolved until the end of the novel.
Backstory: Persuasion chapter 4
In which Austen reveals the backstory between Anne Elliot and Captain Wentworth.
Savage humor: Persuasion chapter 3
Learn how Austen uses narrative layers to subtly savage the characters she wants readers to hate.
What we learn from un-novel novels: Persuasion chapter 2
What can we learn from reading un-novel novels, like Jane Austen’s Persuasion?
How to introduce characters: Persuasion chapter 1
Learn how Austen introduces her characters in chapter 1 of Persuasion.
Comfort reading: Persuasion
Jane Austen’s Persuasion as comfort reading during a pandemic.