Includes bibliographical references (pages 413-416).
From theory of moral sentiments (1759) / Adam Smith -- Rambler No. 32 (1750) / Samuel Johnson -- Idler No. 72 (1759) -- From Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790) -- Edmund Burke -- From Rights of Man (1791) / Thomas Paine -- From a Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792) / Mary Wollstonecraft -- From Sensibility: An Epistle to the Honorable Mrs. Boscawen (1782) / Hannah More -- From Strictures on the Modern System of Female Education (1799) -- Enthusiasm of sentiment; Fragment (1798) -- From Mademoiselle Panache (1796) / Maria Edgeworth -- From Belinda (1801) -- Criticism: Early views -- From Unsigned Review (February 1812) -- Unsigned Review (May 1812) -- From British Novelists (1860) / W.F. Pollock -- From Miss Austen (1866) -- From the Classic Novelist (1894) / Alice Meynell -- From Jane Austen (1917) / Reginald Farrer -- Modern Views: First publication: Thomas Egerton, sense and sensibility, and pride and prejudice / Jan Fergus -- Sensibility / Raymond Williams -- Sensibility and the worship of self / Marilyn Butler -- Ideological contradictions and the consolations of form: Sense and sensibility / Mary Poovey 338 Sense and sensibility: Opinions too common and too dangerous / Claudia L. Johnson -- Wills / Gene Ruoff -- Novel's wisdom: Sense and sensibility / Patricia Meyer Spacks -- Taste: Gourmets and ascetics / Isobel Armstrong -- Sense and sensibility: Letter, post factum / Mary Favret -- Personal and the pro forma / Deidre Shauna Lynch -- Jane Austen and the masturbating girl / Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick -- Mass marketing Jane Austen: Men, women, and courtship in two film adaptations / Deborah Kaplan -- Jane Austen: Chronology.
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Two sisters are drawn into unhappy romances despite the cool judgment of one and the emotional intensity of the other in this nineteenth-century novel that is accompanied by related writings, annotations, and criticisms.