id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_leuzziagefbnpnkrs6c4i2s6va Joseph Carroll Graphing Jane Austen: Agonistic structure in British novels of the nineteenth century 2012 25 .pdf application/pdf 10026 947 57 we constructed a model of human nature and used it to illuminate the evolved psychology that shapes the organization of characters in nineteenth-century British The scores on motives, the criteria for selecting mates, and emotional responses produced data that we condensed into smaller sets of categories through factor Male and female protagonists both score higher than any other character set As predicted by evolutionary theory, female characters in general give a stronger preference to Extrinsic Attributes — wealth, power, and prestige — than male human experience, the depiction of characters in novels, and readers' responses to Taking into account not just the representation of characters but the emotional responses of readers, we can identify agonistic structure in the novels as Motive factors in Austen's antagonists, female protagonists, and male consorts Criteria for selecting marital partners in Austen's antagonists, female protagonists, and male consorts Emotional responses to Austen's antagonists, female protagonists, and male ./cache/work_leuzziagefbnpnkrs6c4i2s6va.pdf ./txt/work_leuzziagefbnpnkrs6c4i2s6va.txt