by Jane Austen (Author), John Mullan (Editor)
'I wonder what will become of her!'
So speculate the friends and neighbours of Emma Woodhouse, the lovely, lively, wilful, and fallible heroine of Jane Austen's fourth published novel. Confident that she knows best, Emma schemes to find a suitable husband for her pliant friend Harriet, only to discover that she understands the feelings of others as little as she does her own heart. As Emma puzzles and blunders her way through the mysteries of her social world, Austen evokes for her readers a cast of unforgettable characters and a detailed portrait of a small town undergoing historical transition.
Written with matchless wit and irony, judged by many to be her finest novel,
Emma has been adapted many times for film and television. This new edition emphasises the novel's extraordinary technical audacity. While apparently conservative in its choice of setting and range of characters, it was - and is - a formally revolutionary work.
Author Biography
Jane Austen, , John Mullan, Professor of English, University College London
John Mullan is Professor of English at University College London. He has previously edited editions of Daniel Defoe's
Roxana (2008) and Samuel Johnson's
The Lives of the Poets (2009) for Oxford World's Classics as well as Jane Austen's
Sense and Sensibility (2019). He is the author of
What Matters in Jane Austen? (Bloomsbury, 2012),
Anonymity: A Secret History of English Literature (Faber & Faber, 2008), and
How Novels Work (OUP, 2006).
Number of Pages: 432
Dimensions: 0.77 x 7.84 x 5.24 IN
Publication Date: May 01, 2022