The Annotated Anne of Green GablesOxford University Press, USA, 1997 M08 28 - 496 páginas Since its publication in 1908, Anne of Green Gables has been a continuous international best-seller, enjoying successful television adaptations on PBS and The Disney Channel, and captivating children and adults alike with the irresistible charms of its remarkable heroine, Anne Shirley. This wildly imaginative, red-headed chatterbox tries to fit into the narrow confines of Victorian expectations, but her exuberant spirit keeps leaping delightfully beyond the bounds. Indeed, when Maud Montgomery decided to reject the sermonizing formulas of the children's books of her day, she brought to life a character much closer to Jane Eyre, David Copperfield, and Tom Sawyer--also orphans, like Anne--than to the self-sacrificing, conformist heroines then in demand. In doing so, Montgomery subtly questioned the values of her society--the stifling restraints of its religion and most especially its treatment of women--while giving readers all the pleasures of her considerable story-telling gifts.Now, in this first fully annotated edition of Anne of Green Gables, readers will appreciate more clearly than ever before the scope and depth of this extraordinary novel. Editors Margaret Anne Doody, Mary Doody Jones, and Wendy Barry provide a richly illustrated, completely revised text, along with hundreds of notes describing the real-life characters and settings Anne encounters, the autobiographical connections between Anne and Maud Montgomery, and the book's astonishing range of literary, biblical, and mythological references. Additional essays offer fascinating background information on such topics as the geography and settlement of Prince Edward Island (where Anne takes place); the education, orphanages, music, and literature of Anne's time; and the horticulture, homemade artifacts, and food preparation that are so prevalent in the story. Margaret Anne Doody supplies a comprehensive introduction, which situates the novel in its literary and social contexts, explores those aspects of Montgomery's life most relevant to the story, examines revisions in the manuscripts, and provides an overall sense of both the impulses that drove Montgomery to write Anne of Green Gables and the larger concerns it dramatizes so compellingly. This edition also contains a chronology of Montgomery's life, an extensive bibliography, songs and poems that appear in the text, and a selection of original reviews of the book. This wealth of material enables readers to grasp the marvelous multi-layeredness of the novel and to understand more fully its place in both its own time and in ours.Elegantly and beautifully designed, with generous illustrations from previous editions, photographs of the places the novel inhabits, and explanatory drawings that reproduce the texture of Anne's world, The Annotated Anne of Green Gables is a major event in the publishing history of one of the world's most charming stories. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 63
Página 10
... young person " take themselves too seriously for that and so in the moral must go . ( SJ I : 263 ) Anne of Green Gables came after the writing of such a moral work " intended ... for a ' Sunday School Library book . " " That book was ...
... young person " take themselves too seriously for that and so in the moral must go . ( SJ I : 263 ) Anne of Green Gables came after the writing of such a moral work " intended ... for a ' Sunday School Library book . " " That book was ...
Página 12
... young girl , an orphan , arrives at her new home .... Her ... clothing does not suit her character ; she is a spontaneous and ebul- lient child . " The new home's inhabitants are un- happy , the home " bleak and sterile , " yet the ...
... young girl , an orphan , arrives at her new home .... Her ... clothing does not suit her character ; she is a spontaneous and ebul- lient child . " The new home's inhabitants are un- happy , the home " bleak and sterile , " yet the ...
Página 13
... young Maud's life , and she had no wish to probe it too hard . At Hugh John's death in January 1900 Maud was greatly shocked . In May of that year she reg- isters the death and reconfigures her relationship to her father : I have nobody ...
... young Maud's life , and she had no wish to probe it too hard . At Hugh John's death in January 1900 Maud was greatly shocked . In May of that year she reg- isters the death and reconfigures her relationship to her father : I have nobody ...
Página 14
... young and often inadequate teachers . Maud was very fond of her teacher , Hattie Gordon , who served as a partial model for Miss Stacy , but Miss Stacy is really a dream teacher . Selena Robinson , who taught school at Cavendish in 1892 ...
... young and often inadequate teachers . Maud was very fond of her teacher , Hattie Gordon , who served as a partial model for Miss Stacy , but Miss Stacy is really a dream teacher . Selena Robinson , who taught school at Cavendish in 1892 ...
Página 16
... young farmer , Herman Leard , whom she met in Bedeque while teaching there in 1897-1898 , but she felt that Herman was " not worthy " of her love . By the time she began writing Anne of Green Gables she had already made the acquaintance ...
... young farmer , Herman Leard , whom she met in Bedeque while teaching there in 1897-1898 , but she felt that Herman was " not worthy " of her love . By the time she began writing Anne of Green Gables she had already made the acquaintance ...
Contenido
IV | 35 |
VI | 397 |
VII | 399 |
VIII | 415 |
IX | 418 |
XI | 422 |
XII | 430 |
XIII | 434 |
XXII | 467 |
XXIII | 470 |
XXIV | 471 |
XXV | 472 |
XXVI | 473 |
XXVII | 474 |
XXVIII | 475 |
XXIX | 477 |
XIV | 438 |
XV | 443 |
XVI | 452 |
XVII | 457 |
XVIII | 463 |
XIX | 464 |
XX | 465 |
XXI | 466 |
XXX | 480 |
XXXI | 481 |
XXXII | 483 |
XXXIII | 490 |
XXXIV | 493 |
XXXV | 495 |
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Términos y frases comunes
afternoon Allan Anne of Avonlea Anne of Green Anne Shirley Anne's Appendix asylum Avonlea Avonlea school beautiful brooch brook cake called Canadian Cavendish Charlottetown child comma Diana dream dress Ewan eyes feel felt flowers garden Gilbert Blythe glad Green Gables heart heroine hyphen imagination Jane Josie Pye knew L. M. Montgomery lady Lake of Shining laughed little girl live look Lucy Maud Montgomery Lynde says Lynde's Macneill Marilla Mary Matthew Cuthbert Miss Barry Miss Stacy morning mother never nice night Nova Scotia novel orchard orphan Phillips poem pretty Prince Edward Island Punctuation Queen raspberry cordial recite red hair restored Rilla of Ingleside Royal Reader Ruby Gillis seems story suppose sweet talk tell there's things thought tion told trees women word