![]() ![]() (Hooray for Edith Wharton!) Her current research focuses on medicine, illness, and the 17th-century writer, considering the work of non-medical writers as well as the physicians who gave discursive shape to the profession that would come to dominate medicine by century’s end. ![]() As well as Women Writing of Divinest Things (Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press, 2004), she has published numerous articles on topics rhetorical and literary, from public discourse in Interregnum England, to interdisciplinarity in literary studies, to the critical reception of Edith Wharton. ![]() Lyn is an Associate Professor at Dalhousie University, where she teaches classes in rhetoric, writing, and close reading. I’m very happy to introduce Lyn Bennett’s guest post on the opening paragraph of Mansfield Park. Please join us here every Friday this year as we read the novel together – open “Your Invitation to Mansfield Park ” for more details. Mansfield Park is not as famous as Jane Austen’s “darling child” Pride and Prejudice, but it’s still beloved, and the celebrations are just beginning. Happy 200th anniversary to Mansfield Park, published on this day in 1814. ![]()
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