id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_lfmig3bghrgltlfcprit5thaii A. Richardson Of Heartache and Head Injury: Reading Minds in Persuasion 2002 20 .pdf application/pdf 6766 699 35 Austen's was a period when a dominant constructionist psychology—associationism—vied with emergent brain-based, organicist, and nativist theories of mind. the brain science of the era.Moreover, Austen's famously innovative style on Man, His Nature, Productions, and Discoveries,Godwin (!"&!:%#–&') hasbecome convinced that ''human creatures are born into theworldwith various dispositions'' most likely rooted in the ''subtle network of the brain.'' painful experience, most notably hermother's death (whenAnne is fourteen)andheryouthfulbreakwithFrederick (fiveyears later),Louisa's character is ''altered,'' remarkablyandapparently for life,byasingle incident,a Here too one finds unexpected convergence between Austen's experiments with representing character and subjective life in Persuasion and the Richardson • Of Heartache and Head Injury: Reading Minds in Persuasion 159 Richardson • Of Heartache and Head Injury: Reading Minds in Persuasion 159 Richardson • Of Heartache and Head Injury: Reading Minds in Persuasion 159 Richardson • Of Heartache and Head Injury: Reading Minds in Persuasion 159 !##% Jane Austen and the Body (Cambridge:CambridgeUniversity Press). ./cache/work_lfmig3bghrgltlfcprit5thaii.pdf ./txt/work_lfmig3bghrgltlfcprit5thaii.txt