You are Cordially Invited to JASNA-Vermont’s June Meeting
“Trickle-Down Economics in Pride and Prejudice;
Or, Why ‘Mr. Darcy Improves upon Acquaintance’!”
with Sheryl Craig*
What Jane Austen’s first readers did not need to be told was that a man named Fitzwilliam Darcy had to be a moderate Whig, one who supported Tory Prime Minister William Pitt’s tax and Poor Law reform proposals, and that Darcy’s home county, Derbyshire, paid high wages, provided generous welfare benefits, and funded the best system of poor houses in England. Thus, Darcy, and moderate Whigs like him, were worthy of both Elizabeth Bennet’s and the reader’s esteem and served as role models to be emulated throughout Georgian Britain and, as it turns out, throughout time.
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Sunday, 2 June 2013, 2 – 4 p.m.
Champlain College, Hauke Conference Center,
375 Maple St Burlington VT
~Free & open to the Public~
~Light refreshments served~
For more information: JASNAVermont [at] gmail [dot] com
Please visit our blog at: http://JaneAustenInVermont.wordpress.com
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* Sheryl Craig has published articles in Jane Austen’s Regency World, Persuasions, Persuasions On-Line, and The Explicator. She has also written film reviews for the Jane Austen Centre in Bath. Sheryl was JASNA’s International Visitor in 2008, is the editor of JASNA News, and was JASNA’s Traveling Lecturer for the Central region in 2012. She has a Ph.D. in Nineteenth-century British literature from the University of Kansas, has taught at the University of Central Missouri for over twenty years, and is a life member of JASNA.
Workhouse at St. James’s Parish – from The Microcosm of London, 1810, [wikipedia commons]
Great speaker! Wish I could come. Elsa
Sent from my iPhone
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Knowing how busy you are this spring, I am even more in awe of how you found the time and energy to write this excellent post!
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A wonderful talk! Interesting and informative, and as you could tell by the number of questions afterwards, she engaged everyone in her topic. Prof. Craig was scholarly in the best way. A great meeting.
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Yes Sharon, wasn’t Sheryl great! So glad to see you there [though we didn’t get to chat…] – thanks so much for commenting here – I will pass it on to Sheryl!
Best,
Deb
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