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Year 2025, Issue: 40, 294 - 315, 25.10.2025
https://doi.org/10.15182/diclesosbed.1658253

Abstract

References

  • Alexander, M. (2000). A history of English literature. Macmillan Press.
  • Austen, J. (1814-1816). Letters to Fanny Knight (Brabourne Edition). https://pemberley.com/janeinfo/brablt15.html (1 March, 2025).
  • Austen, J. (1818). Northanger Abbey. Penguin Popular Classics.
  • Austen, J. (2022). Persuasion. MK Publications. (Original work published 1817 by John Murray).
  • Austen, J. (2022). Pride and Prejudice. MK Publications. (Original work published 1813 by T. Egerton).
  • Austen, J. (2022). Sense and Sensibility. MK Publications. (Original work published 1811 by T. Egerton).
  • Booth, W. C. (1983). The rhetoric of fiction. University of Chicago Press.
  • Brock, C. E. (n. d). Politely Drew Back and Stopped to Give Them Way. Special Collections, Firestone Library, Princeton University. Provenance: Chris Beetles, from https://graphicarts.princeton.edu/2021/04/06/c-e-brocks-illustrations-for-austens-persuasion/ (4 March, 2025).
  • Everett, J. M. (1951). Mrs. Coventry Patmore. https://collection.beta.fitz.ms/id/object/3638 (7 March, 2025). Goon, C. A. (1983). A critical exploration of Jane Austen’s Persuasion (Master’s thesis). The Institute for Christian Studies, Toronto, Ontario.
  • Güney, A., & Yavuz, M. E. (2008). The nineteenth-century literature and feminist motives in Jane Austen’s novels. E-Journal of New World Sciences Academy, 3(1), 526-538.
  • Joannou, M., (1995). Ladies, please don’t smash these windows: Women’s writing, feminist consciousness, and social change, 1918-1938. Berg.
  • Johnson, M. (2023). Jane Austen’s Persuasion: Finding companionate marriage through sickness and health. Humanities, 12(5): 114, 1-11. https://doi.org/10.3390/h12050114
  • London Museum. (n.d.). Emmeline Pankhurst addressing a crowd in New York, from https://www.londonmuseum.org.uk/collections/v/object-457087/emmeline-pankhurst addressing-a-crowd-in-new-york/ (28 February, 2025).
  • Mudrick, M. (1952). Jane Austen: Irony as defense and discovery. Princeton University Press.
  • Patmore, C. (1854). “The wife’s tragedy.” In The Angel in the House together with the victories of love. George
  • Routledge & Sons, Limited, from https://dn790004.ca.archive.org/0/items/angelinhousetoge00patmuoft/angelinhousetoge00patmuoft.pdf (10 March, 2025).
  • Porter, R. (1991). English society in the eighteenth century (Rev. ed.). Penguin Books.
  • Posusta, R. (2014). Architecture of the mind and place in Jane Austen’s Persuasion. Critical Survey, 26(1), 76-91. https://doi.org/10.3167/cs.2014.260106
  • Scott, W. (1826). The most wonderful I ever met with: Scott’s admiration for Austen. https://janeaustens.house/articles/walter-scott-and-jane-austen/ (2 March, 2025).
  • Soria, C. G. (2012). Austen illustrators Henry and Charles Brock. Molland’s Circulating Library. http://www.mollands.net/etexts/other/brocks.html (4 March, 2025).
  • Stone, L. (1977). The family, sex and marriage in England, 1500-1800, Harper & Row.
  • Sutherland, K. (2021). ‘Where history says little, fiction may say much’ (Anna Barbauld): The historical novel in women’s hands in the mid-twentieth century, Part 1: Gender. In S. J. Rayner & K. Wilkins (Eds.), Georgette Heyer, History and Historical Fiction (pp. 17-35).
  • Thompson, H. (n.d.). Placed it before Anne. Illustrations for Jane Austen’s other novels, by Charles E. Brock and others. https://pemberley.com/janeinfo/jabrokil.html (4 March,2025).
  • Thompson, H. (n.d.). Sits at her elbow, reading verse. Illustration for Persuasion by Jane Austen (litho.) Picture ID: 963854. https://www.meisterdrucke.uk/fine-art-prints/Hugh-Thomson/963854/Illustration-for-Persuasion-by-Jane-Austen.html%20 (3 March, 2025).
  • Trollope, A. (1870). Trollope. In Jane Austen’s art and her literary reputation. https://pemberley.com/janeinfo/janeart.html#trollop (1 March, 2025).
  • Urgan, M. (2007). İngiliz edebiyat tarihi. Yapı Kredi Yayınları.
  • Vivanco, L. (2009). Heyer 2009: Mary Joannou: ‘Heyer and Austen.’ In Musings on romance fiction from an academic perspective. http://teachmetonight.blogspot.com/2009/11/heyer-2009-mary-joannou-heyer-and.html (27 February, 2025).
  • Watt, I. (1981). The rise of the novel: Studies in Defoe, Richardson, and Fielding. Pelican Books.
  • Woolf, V. (1924). Collected essays by Virginia Woolf Vol. 1. The Hogarth Press. https://archive.org/stream/in.ernet.dli.2015.462734/2015.462734.Collected-Essays_djvu.txt (1 March, 2025).
  • Woolf, V. (1942). The death of the moth and other essays. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.

Year 2025, Issue: 40, 294 - 315, 25.10.2025
https://doi.org/10.15182/diclesosbed.1658253

Abstract

References

  • Alexander, M. (2000). A history of English literature. Macmillan Press.
  • Austen, J. (1814-1816). Letters to Fanny Knight (Brabourne Edition). https://pemberley.com/janeinfo/brablt15.html (1 March, 2025).
  • Austen, J. (1818). Northanger Abbey. Penguin Popular Classics.
  • Austen, J. (2022). Persuasion. MK Publications. (Original work published 1817 by John Murray).
  • Austen, J. (2022). Pride and Prejudice. MK Publications. (Original work published 1813 by T. Egerton).
  • Austen, J. (2022). Sense and Sensibility. MK Publications. (Original work published 1811 by T. Egerton).
  • Booth, W. C. (1983). The rhetoric of fiction. University of Chicago Press.
  • Brock, C. E. (n. d). Politely Drew Back and Stopped to Give Them Way. Special Collections, Firestone Library, Princeton University. Provenance: Chris Beetles, from https://graphicarts.princeton.edu/2021/04/06/c-e-brocks-illustrations-for-austens-persuasion/ (4 March, 2025).
  • Everett, J. M. (1951). Mrs. Coventry Patmore. https://collection.beta.fitz.ms/id/object/3638 (7 March, 2025). Goon, C. A. (1983). A critical exploration of Jane Austen’s Persuasion (Master’s thesis). The Institute for Christian Studies, Toronto, Ontario.
  • Güney, A., & Yavuz, M. E. (2008). The nineteenth-century literature and feminist motives in Jane Austen’s novels. E-Journal of New World Sciences Academy, 3(1), 526-538.
  • Joannou, M., (1995). Ladies, please don’t smash these windows: Women’s writing, feminist consciousness, and social change, 1918-1938. Berg.
  • Johnson, M. (2023). Jane Austen’s Persuasion: Finding companionate marriage through sickness and health. Humanities, 12(5): 114, 1-11. https://doi.org/10.3390/h12050114
  • London Museum. (n.d.). Emmeline Pankhurst addressing a crowd in New York, from https://www.londonmuseum.org.uk/collections/v/object-457087/emmeline-pankhurst addressing-a-crowd-in-new-york/ (28 February, 2025).
  • Mudrick, M. (1952). Jane Austen: Irony as defense and discovery. Princeton University Press.
  • Patmore, C. (1854). “The wife’s tragedy.” In The Angel in the House together with the victories of love. George
  • Routledge & Sons, Limited, from https://dn790004.ca.archive.org/0/items/angelinhousetoge00patmuoft/angelinhousetoge00patmuoft.pdf (10 March, 2025).
  • Porter, R. (1991). English society in the eighteenth century (Rev. ed.). Penguin Books.
  • Posusta, R. (2014). Architecture of the mind and place in Jane Austen’s Persuasion. Critical Survey, 26(1), 76-91. https://doi.org/10.3167/cs.2014.260106
  • Scott, W. (1826). The most wonderful I ever met with: Scott’s admiration for Austen. https://janeaustens.house/articles/walter-scott-and-jane-austen/ (2 March, 2025).
  • Soria, C. G. (2012). Austen illustrators Henry and Charles Brock. Molland’s Circulating Library. http://www.mollands.net/etexts/other/brocks.html (4 March, 2025).
  • Stone, L. (1977). The family, sex and marriage in England, 1500-1800, Harper & Row.
  • Sutherland, K. (2021). ‘Where history says little, fiction may say much’ (Anna Barbauld): The historical novel in women’s hands in the mid-twentieth century, Part 1: Gender. In S. J. Rayner & K. Wilkins (Eds.), Georgette Heyer, History and Historical Fiction (pp. 17-35).
  • Thompson, H. (n.d.). Placed it before Anne. Illustrations for Jane Austen’s other novels, by Charles E. Brock and others. https://pemberley.com/janeinfo/jabrokil.html (4 March,2025).
  • Thompson, H. (n.d.). Sits at her elbow, reading verse. Illustration for Persuasion by Jane Austen (litho.) Picture ID: 963854. https://www.meisterdrucke.uk/fine-art-prints/Hugh-Thomson/963854/Illustration-for-Persuasion-by-Jane-Austen.html%20 (3 March, 2025).
  • Trollope, A. (1870). Trollope. In Jane Austen’s art and her literary reputation. https://pemberley.com/janeinfo/janeart.html#trollop (1 March, 2025).
  • Urgan, M. (2007). İngiliz edebiyat tarihi. Yapı Kredi Yayınları.
  • Vivanco, L. (2009). Heyer 2009: Mary Joannou: ‘Heyer and Austen.’ In Musings on romance fiction from an academic perspective. http://teachmetonight.blogspot.com/2009/11/heyer-2009-mary-joannou-heyer-and.html (27 February, 2025).
  • Watt, I. (1981). The rise of the novel: Studies in Defoe, Richardson, and Fielding. Pelican Books.
  • Woolf, V. (1924). Collected essays by Virginia Woolf Vol. 1. The Hogarth Press. https://archive.org/stream/in.ernet.dli.2015.462734/2015.462734.Collected-Essays_djvu.txt (1 March, 2025).
  • Woolf, V. (1942). The death of the moth and other essays. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.

Subtle Feminism and Gender-based Representations in Jane Austen's Persuasion

Year 2025, Issue: 40, 294 - 315, 25.10.2025
https://doi.org/10.15182/diclesosbed.1658253

Abstract

“Jane-uary” 2025 marks the 250th anniversary of Jane Austen’s birth, celebrating her significant contributions to 19th-century English literature. Austen’s innovative plots, narrative techniques, characterisations and vivid portrayals of ordinary life shaped the evolution of the English novel. Her final novel, Persuasion, published posthumously in 1817, is often considered the most overlooked of her works; however, it stands out as the most mature of her novels, offering a profound exploration of women’s inner lives and desires, particularly with regard to women’s autonomy in marriage. Unlike Austen’s earlier heroines, Anne Elliot is a subtle feminist who is granted greater feminist recognition, evolving individually, emotionally, and intellectually throughout the novel. Through Anne, Austen subtly conveys her feminist motives, prioritizing love and female emotions over societal approval. This paper offers a new perspective on Persuasion, interpreting Anne’s journey as her self-persuasion toward personal healing and the reconstruction of her identity, where she asserts autonomy and equality in her approach to marriage. It also extends to other female characters, highlighting Austen’s empowerment of women with strength, independence and agency. From an aesthetic perspective, this paper further includes a discussion of selected illustrations created for this novel, and explores their role as gender-based visual representations.

References

  • Alexander, M. (2000). A history of English literature. Macmillan Press.
  • Austen, J. (1814-1816). Letters to Fanny Knight (Brabourne Edition). https://pemberley.com/janeinfo/brablt15.html (1 March, 2025).
  • Austen, J. (1818). Northanger Abbey. Penguin Popular Classics.
  • Austen, J. (2022). Persuasion. MK Publications. (Original work published 1817 by John Murray).
  • Austen, J. (2022). Pride and Prejudice. MK Publications. (Original work published 1813 by T. Egerton).
  • Austen, J. (2022). Sense and Sensibility. MK Publications. (Original work published 1811 by T. Egerton).
  • Booth, W. C. (1983). The rhetoric of fiction. University of Chicago Press.
  • Brock, C. E. (n. d). Politely Drew Back and Stopped to Give Them Way. Special Collections, Firestone Library, Princeton University. Provenance: Chris Beetles, from https://graphicarts.princeton.edu/2021/04/06/c-e-brocks-illustrations-for-austens-persuasion/ (4 March, 2025).
  • Everett, J. M. (1951). Mrs. Coventry Patmore. https://collection.beta.fitz.ms/id/object/3638 (7 March, 2025). Goon, C. A. (1983). A critical exploration of Jane Austen’s Persuasion (Master’s thesis). The Institute for Christian Studies, Toronto, Ontario.
  • Güney, A., & Yavuz, M. E. (2008). The nineteenth-century literature and feminist motives in Jane Austen’s novels. E-Journal of New World Sciences Academy, 3(1), 526-538.
  • Joannou, M., (1995). Ladies, please don’t smash these windows: Women’s writing, feminist consciousness, and social change, 1918-1938. Berg.
  • Johnson, M. (2023). Jane Austen’s Persuasion: Finding companionate marriage through sickness and health. Humanities, 12(5): 114, 1-11. https://doi.org/10.3390/h12050114
  • London Museum. (n.d.). Emmeline Pankhurst addressing a crowd in New York, from https://www.londonmuseum.org.uk/collections/v/object-457087/emmeline-pankhurst addressing-a-crowd-in-new-york/ (28 February, 2025).
  • Mudrick, M. (1952). Jane Austen: Irony as defense and discovery. Princeton University Press.
  • Patmore, C. (1854). “The wife’s tragedy.” In The Angel in the House together with the victories of love. George
  • Routledge & Sons, Limited, from https://dn790004.ca.archive.org/0/items/angelinhousetoge00patmuoft/angelinhousetoge00patmuoft.pdf (10 March, 2025).
  • Porter, R. (1991). English society in the eighteenth century (Rev. ed.). Penguin Books.
  • Posusta, R. (2014). Architecture of the mind and place in Jane Austen’s Persuasion. Critical Survey, 26(1), 76-91. https://doi.org/10.3167/cs.2014.260106
  • Scott, W. (1826). The most wonderful I ever met with: Scott’s admiration for Austen. https://janeaustens.house/articles/walter-scott-and-jane-austen/ (2 March, 2025).
  • Soria, C. G. (2012). Austen illustrators Henry and Charles Brock. Molland’s Circulating Library. http://www.mollands.net/etexts/other/brocks.html (4 March, 2025).
  • Stone, L. (1977). The family, sex and marriage in England, 1500-1800, Harper & Row.
  • Sutherland, K. (2021). ‘Where history says little, fiction may say much’ (Anna Barbauld): The historical novel in women’s hands in the mid-twentieth century, Part 1: Gender. In S. J. Rayner & K. Wilkins (Eds.), Georgette Heyer, History and Historical Fiction (pp. 17-35).
  • Thompson, H. (n.d.). Placed it before Anne. Illustrations for Jane Austen’s other novels, by Charles E. Brock and others. https://pemberley.com/janeinfo/jabrokil.html (4 March,2025).
  • Thompson, H. (n.d.). Sits at her elbow, reading verse. Illustration for Persuasion by Jane Austen (litho.) Picture ID: 963854. https://www.meisterdrucke.uk/fine-art-prints/Hugh-Thomson/963854/Illustration-for-Persuasion-by-Jane-Austen.html%20 (3 March, 2025).
  • Trollope, A. (1870). Trollope. In Jane Austen’s art and her literary reputation. https://pemberley.com/janeinfo/janeart.html#trollop (1 March, 2025).
  • Urgan, M. (2007). İngiliz edebiyat tarihi. Yapı Kredi Yayınları.
  • Vivanco, L. (2009). Heyer 2009: Mary Joannou: ‘Heyer and Austen.’ In Musings on romance fiction from an academic perspective. http://teachmetonight.blogspot.com/2009/11/heyer-2009-mary-joannou-heyer-and.html (27 February, 2025).
  • Watt, I. (1981). The rise of the novel: Studies in Defoe, Richardson, and Fielding. Pelican Books.
  • Woolf, V. (1924). Collected essays by Virginia Woolf Vol. 1. The Hogarth Press. https://archive.org/stream/in.ernet.dli.2015.462734/2015.462734.Collected-Essays_djvu.txt (1 March, 2025).
  • Woolf, V. (1942). The death of the moth and other essays. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.

Jane Austen'ın İkna eserinde Gizli Feminizm ve Toplumsal Cinsiyet Temelli Temsiller

Year 2025, Issue: 40, 294 - 315, 25.10.2025
https://doi.org/10.15182/diclesosbed.1658253

Abstract

2025 yılı Ocak ayında Jane Austen’ın 250. doğum yıldönümünü ve 19. yüzyıl İngiliz Edebiyatına yaptığı önemli katkıları kutluyoruz. Austen’ın yenilikçi hikâye kurguları, anlatım teknikleri, karakter tasvirleri ve sıradan yaşamı canlı bir şekilde betimlemesi, İngiliz romanının evrimini şekillendirmiştir. Austen’ın ölümünden sonra, 1817 yılında yayımlanan son romanı İkna, genellikle yazarın eserleri arasında en göz ardı edilen olarak kabul edilse de aslında bu eser, onun en olgun romanıdır. Özellikle kadınların evlilik kurumunda özerklik kazanmasını ele alan bu eser, onların iç dünyalarını ve isteklerini de derinlemesine inceler. Anne Elliot, Austen’ın önceki kadın kahramanlarından farklı olarak, bireysel, duygusal ve entelektüel olarak evrilen ve daha fazla feminist itibar kazanmış gizli bir feminist karakterdir. Austen, karakteri Anne aracılığıyla, toplumsal onaydan çok aşkı ve kadın duygularını ön planda tutarak feminist amaçlarını ince bir şekilde aktarır. Bu makale, İkna romanına yeni bir bakış açısı getirerek, Anne’in evrimsel yolculuğunu kişisel iyileşme ve yeniden kimlik inşası yolunda kendisini ikna etme süreci olarak ele alır ve evlilik konusunda özerklik ve eşitlik kazanma arayışını tartışır. Ayrıca, diğer kadın karakterlere de değinerek Austen’ın kadınlara güç, özgürlük ve özerklik kazandırma biçimini vurgular. Bu çalışma, eseri estetik bağlamda da ele alarak, seçilmiş bazı İkna illüstrasyonlarının toplumsal cinsiyet temelli görsel temsiller olarak rollerini inceleyen bir tartışma da içerir.

References

  • Alexander, M. (2000). A history of English literature. Macmillan Press.
  • Austen, J. (1814-1816). Letters to Fanny Knight (Brabourne Edition). https://pemberley.com/janeinfo/brablt15.html (1 March, 2025).
  • Austen, J. (1818). Northanger Abbey. Penguin Popular Classics.
  • Austen, J. (2022). Persuasion. MK Publications. (Original work published 1817 by John Murray).
  • Austen, J. (2022). Pride and Prejudice. MK Publications. (Original work published 1813 by T. Egerton).
  • Austen, J. (2022). Sense and Sensibility. MK Publications. (Original work published 1811 by T. Egerton).
  • Booth, W. C. (1983). The rhetoric of fiction. University of Chicago Press.
  • Brock, C. E. (n. d). Politely Drew Back and Stopped to Give Them Way. Special Collections, Firestone Library, Princeton University. Provenance: Chris Beetles, from https://graphicarts.princeton.edu/2021/04/06/c-e-brocks-illustrations-for-austens-persuasion/ (4 March, 2025).
  • Everett, J. M. (1951). Mrs. Coventry Patmore. https://collection.beta.fitz.ms/id/object/3638 (7 March, 2025). Goon, C. A. (1983). A critical exploration of Jane Austen’s Persuasion (Master’s thesis). The Institute for Christian Studies, Toronto, Ontario.
  • Güney, A., & Yavuz, M. E. (2008). The nineteenth-century literature and feminist motives in Jane Austen’s novels. E-Journal of New World Sciences Academy, 3(1), 526-538.
  • Joannou, M., (1995). Ladies, please don’t smash these windows: Women’s writing, feminist consciousness, and social change, 1918-1938. Berg.
  • Johnson, M. (2023). Jane Austen’s Persuasion: Finding companionate marriage through sickness and health. Humanities, 12(5): 114, 1-11. https://doi.org/10.3390/h12050114
  • London Museum. (n.d.). Emmeline Pankhurst addressing a crowd in New York, from https://www.londonmuseum.org.uk/collections/v/object-457087/emmeline-pankhurst addressing-a-crowd-in-new-york/ (28 February, 2025).
  • Mudrick, M. (1952). Jane Austen: Irony as defense and discovery. Princeton University Press.
  • Patmore, C. (1854). “The wife’s tragedy.” In The Angel in the House together with the victories of love. George
  • Routledge & Sons, Limited, from https://dn790004.ca.archive.org/0/items/angelinhousetoge00patmuoft/angelinhousetoge00patmuoft.pdf (10 March, 2025).
  • Porter, R. (1991). English society in the eighteenth century (Rev. ed.). Penguin Books.
  • Posusta, R. (2014). Architecture of the mind and place in Jane Austen’s Persuasion. Critical Survey, 26(1), 76-91. https://doi.org/10.3167/cs.2014.260106
  • Scott, W. (1826). The most wonderful I ever met with: Scott’s admiration for Austen. https://janeaustens.house/articles/walter-scott-and-jane-austen/ (2 March, 2025).
  • Soria, C. G. (2012). Austen illustrators Henry and Charles Brock. Molland’s Circulating Library. http://www.mollands.net/etexts/other/brocks.html (4 March, 2025).
  • Stone, L. (1977). The family, sex and marriage in England, 1500-1800, Harper & Row.
  • Sutherland, K. (2021). ‘Where history says little, fiction may say much’ (Anna Barbauld): The historical novel in women’s hands in the mid-twentieth century, Part 1: Gender. In S. J. Rayner & K. Wilkins (Eds.), Georgette Heyer, History and Historical Fiction (pp. 17-35).
  • Thompson, H. (n.d.). Placed it before Anne. Illustrations for Jane Austen’s other novels, by Charles E. Brock and others. https://pemberley.com/janeinfo/jabrokil.html (4 March,2025).
  • Thompson, H. (n.d.). Sits at her elbow, reading verse. Illustration for Persuasion by Jane Austen (litho.) Picture ID: 963854. https://www.meisterdrucke.uk/fine-art-prints/Hugh-Thomson/963854/Illustration-for-Persuasion-by-Jane-Austen.html%20 (3 March, 2025).
  • Trollope, A. (1870). Trollope. In Jane Austen’s art and her literary reputation. https://pemberley.com/janeinfo/janeart.html#trollop (1 March, 2025).
  • Urgan, M. (2007). İngiliz edebiyat tarihi. Yapı Kredi Yayınları.
  • Vivanco, L. (2009). Heyer 2009: Mary Joannou: ‘Heyer and Austen.’ In Musings on romance fiction from an academic perspective. http://teachmetonight.blogspot.com/2009/11/heyer-2009-mary-joannou-heyer-and.html (27 February, 2025).
  • Watt, I. (1981). The rise of the novel: Studies in Defoe, Richardson, and Fielding. Pelican Books.
  • Woolf, V. (1924). Collected essays by Virginia Woolf Vol. 1. The Hogarth Press. https://archive.org/stream/in.ernet.dli.2015.462734/2015.462734.Collected-Essays_djvu.txt (1 March, 2025).
  • Woolf, V. (1942). The death of the moth and other essays. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.
There are 30 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Subjects British and Irish Language, Literature and Culture
Journal Section Research Articles
Authors

Tuğba Karabulut 0000-0002-5205-3273

Early Pub Date October 25, 2025
Publication Date October 25, 2025
Submission Date March 14, 2025
Acceptance Date August 19, 2025
Published in Issue Year 2025 Issue: 40

Cite

APA Karabulut, T. (2025). Subtle Feminism and Gender-based Representations in Jane Austen’s Persuasion. Dicle Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü Dergisi(40), 294-315. https://doi.org/10.15182/diclesosbed.1658253

Dicle University
Journal of Social Sciences Institute (DUSBED)