@DrOctaviaCox
  @DrOctaviaCox
Dr Octavia Cox | EMMA WOODHOUSE: Why is she an unlikeable heroine? — Jane Austen EMMA novel analysis @DrOctaviaCox | Uploaded June 2022 | Updated October 2024, 14 hours ago.
Why is Emma Woodhouse unlikeable? Jane Austen’s nephew, James Edward Austen Leigh, in his Memoir of Jane Austen (1870) remarked, “She was very fond of Emma, but did not reckon on her being a general favourite; for, when commencing that work, she said, ‘I am going to take a heroine whom no one but myself will much like’”. The lecture compares likeable Elizabeth Bennet, heroine of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice (1813), and (supposedly) unlikeable Emma Woodhouse, heroine of Jane Austen’s novel Emma (1816), and asks why Jane Austen chose to create an unlikeable heroine. Why is it a good thing if Emma Woodhouse is an unlikeable heroine?

Follow me on Twitter: twitter.com/DrOctaviaCox
CLOSE READING CLASSIC LITERATURE
#DrOctaviaCox
#JaneAusten
#CloseReadingClassicLiterature

FOR MORE LITERARY ANALYSIS see my ‘Close Reading Classic Literature’ playlist:
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLtaJuZ0gvqXU6Pta3cwOxpXMHp9AqxcF1

KEYWORDS
english literature analysis
jane austen analysis
emma woodhouse analysis
jane austen emma novel analysis
emma novel by jane austen
jane austen fiction
ideal heroines
elizabeth bennet in pride and prejudice
emma woodhouse as heroine
a heroine whom no one but myself will much like
english literature analysis
jane austen analysis
emma woodhouse analysis
jane austen emma novel analysis
emma novel by jane austen
jane austen fiction
ideal heroines
elizabeth bennet in pride and prejudice
emma woodhouse as heroine
a heroine whom no one but myself will much like
english literature analysis
jane austen analysis
emma woodhouse analysis
jane austen emma novel analysis
emma novel by jane austen
jane austen fiction
ideal heroines
elizabeth bennet in pride and prejudice
emma woodhouse as heroine
a heroine whom no one but myself will much like
english literature analysis
jane austen analysis
emma woodhouse analysis
jane austen emma novel analysis
emma novel by jane austen
jane austen fiction
ideal heroines
elizabeth bennet in pride and prejudice
emma woodhouse as heroine
a heroine whom no one but myself will much like
english literature analysis
jane austen analysis
emma woodhouse analysis
jane austen emma novel analysis
emma novel by jane austen
jane austen fiction
ideal heroines
elizabeth bennet in pride and prejudice
emma woodhouse as heroine
a heroine whom no one but myself will much like
english literature analysis
jane austen analysis
emma woodhouse analysis
jane austen emma novel analysis
emma novel by jane austen
jane austen fiction
ideal heroines
elizabeth bennet in pride and prejudice
emma woodhouse as heroine
a heroine whom no one but myself will much like
english literature analysis
jane austen analysis
emma woodhouse analysis
jane austen emma novel analysis
emma novel by jane austen
jane austen fiction
ideal heroines
elizabeth bennet in pride and prejudice
emma woodhouse as heroine
a heroine whom no one but myself will much like
english literature analysis
jane austen analysis
emma woodhouse analysis
jane austen emma novel analysis
emma novel by jane austen
jane austen fiction
ideal heroines
elizabeth bennet in pride and prejudice
emma woodhouse as heroine
a heroine whom no one but myself will much like
english literature analysis
jane austen analysis
emma woodhouse analysis
jane austen emma novel analysis
emma novel by jane austen
jane austen fiction
ideal heroines
elizabeth bennet in pride and prejudice
emma woodhouse as heroine
a heroine whom no one but myself will much like
english literature analysis
jane austen analysis
emma woodhouse analysis
jane austen emma novel analysis
emma novel by jane austen
jane austen fiction
ideal heroines
elizabeth bennet in pride and prejudice
emma woodhouse as heroine
a heroine whom no one but myself will much like
english literature analysis
jane austen analysis
emma woodhouse analysis
jane austen emma novel analysis
emma novel by jane austen
jane austen fiction
ideal heroines
elizabeth bennet in pride and prejudice
emma woodhouse as heroine
a heroine whom no one but myself will much like
english literature analysis
jane austen analysis
emma woodhouse analysis
jane austen emma novel analysis
emma novel by jane austen
jane austen fiction
ideal heroines
elizabeth bennet in pride and prejudice
emma woodhouse as heroine
a heroine whom no one but myself will much like
english literature analysis
jane austen analysis
emma woodhouse analysis
jane austen emma novel analysis
emma novel by jane austen
jane austen fiction
ideal heroines
elizabeth bennet in pride and prejudice
emma woodhouse as heroine
a heroine whom no one but myself will much like
english literature analysis
jane austen analysis
emma woodhouse analysis
jane austen emma novel analysis
emma novel by jane austen
jane austen fiction
ideal heroines
elizabeth bennet in pride and prejudice
emma woodhouse as heroine
a heroine whom no one but myself will much like
english literature analysis
jane austen analysis
emma woodhouse analysis
jane austen emma novel analysis
jane austen emma
EMMA WOODHOUSE: Why is she an unlikeable heroine? — Jane Austen EMMA novel analysisWilliam Wordsworth LONDON 1802 poem reading | ROMANTICISM POETRY READING | English Literature | POEMWUTHERING HEIGHTS – Structure & Narrative Technique | Emily Brontë WUTHERING HEIGHTS novel analysisJane Austen novel SENSE AND SENSIBILITY analysis | Elinor and Marianne Dashwood (Engagements & Hair)Percy Bysshe Shelley OZYMANDIAS poem analysis—Reading, Telling & Interpreting—Romanticism LiteratureFanny Prices Imagination | Jane Austen MANSFIELD PARK analysis | Edmund Bertram & Mary CrawfordCharlotte Smith WRITTEN AT THE CLOSE OF SPRING analysis—ELEGIAC SONNETS poem—What is sonnet form?Eliza Brandon, Colonel Brandon, & Gothic Fiction—Jane Austen’s novels—SENSE AND SENSIBILITY analysisJane Austen’s Mansfield Park: How does Fanny Price’s letter expose Sir Thomas Bertram’s corruption?WHY DID MR WICKHAM ‘ELOPE’ WITH LYDIA BENNET? Jane Austen PRIDE AND PREJUDICE character analysisJANE AUSTEN’s mock-dedication letter | Jane Austen’s playful alliteration in her Juvenilia ANALYSISPercy Bysshe Shelley poem ‘England in 1819’ line by line analysis & context | Romanticism poetry

EMMA WOODHOUSE: Why is she an unlikeable heroine? — Jane Austen EMMA novel analysis @DrOctaviaCox

SHARE TO X SHARE TO REDDIT SHARE TO FACEBOOK WALLPAPER