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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. Jane Austen's stance upon her own British heritage is often indicative of a writer whose personal conviction is to reinvent humanity on a decidedly more humane and compassionate level. In "Mansfield Park," Austen strives to appoint the combined elements of values and moral sensibilities as two of humanity's most forthright aspirations, a literary task she attempts both covertly and comprehensively. No additional sources cited.
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5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCMnsfl.rtf
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two of humanitys most forthright aspirations, a literary task she attempts both covertly and comprehensively. No additional sources cited. TLCMnsfl.rtf JANE AUSTENS "MANSFIELD PARK": VALUES
AND MORAL SENSIBILITIES by (c) September 2002 paper properly! Jane Austens stance upon her own British
heritage is often indicative of a writer whose personal conviction is to reinvent humanity on a decidedly more humane and compassionate level. In Mansfield Park, Austen strives to appoint
the combined elements of values and moral sensibilities as two of humanitys most forthright aspirations, a literary task she attempts both covertly and comprehensively.
Austen illustrates how creating a useable value system is humanitys ultimate and forthright goal; indeed, the extent to which society plays a role in this formation is unarguable when
one looks across the global community. Based upon her literary convictions, it can readily be argued that the concept of values is the fundamental basis of humanitys duty and
obligation, which is recognized as being significantly divergent from the rest of the animal world. One gathers from the vast differences between and among Sir Thomas Bertram, Fanny Price
and Henry & Mary Crawford that characteristic of humanitys constant quest for the concept of meaning, the journey of understanding has come to represent myriad things to myriad people, ultimately
rendering any universal explanation virtually impossible. The problem with meaning as it applies to values and moral sensibilities in Mansfield Park is attempting to successfully pinpoint a single yet
comprehensive connotation to its concept; however, this cannot be achieved as long as any two individuals harbor decidedly different interpretations. "It is true that Edmund was very far from
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