Acknowledgments Introduction: “How Much Sooner One Tires of Anything” than of Jane Austen -- Mimi Marinucci
Part I. Love and Marriage 1 Love in the Time of Epistemic Injustice -- Vittorio Bufacchi 2 Can there be Sense without Sensibility? The Middle Road to Love and Marriage in Jane Austen -- Sally Winkle 3 Love, Marriage and Dialectics in the Novels of Jane Austen -- Suzie Gibson 4 Beyond Pride and Prejudice: Jane Austin and Friedrich Nietzsche on What Makes a Happy Marriage -- William A. Lindenmuth 5 Marriage and Friendship in Jane Austen: Self-knowledge, Virtue, and the “Second Self” -- Kathleen Dougherty
Part II. Morality and Virtue 6 Finding Happiness at Hartfield -- Janelle Pötzsch 7 The Last Great Representative of the Virtues: MacIntyre after Austen -- David LaRocca 8 Jane Austen on Moral Luck -- Eva Dadlez
Part III. Wealth and Class 9 Women Owning Property: The Great Lady in Jane Austen -- Rita Oliveira 10 Deconstructing Entailment -- Christopher Ketcham 11 “Pictures of Perfection Make Me Sick and Wicked”: Privilege and Parody in Emma -- Nancy Marck Cantwell 12 “The Middle Classes at Play”: Austen and Marx Go to Hollywood -- Charles Bane
Part IV. Concepts and Clarifications 13 Do You Want to Know a Secret? The Immorality and Morality of Secrets and the Subversive Jane Austen -- Elizabeth Olson and Charles Taliaferro 14 Persuasion, Influence, and Over-Persuasion -- Keith Dromm and Heather Salter 15 The Language Games of Persuasion -- Richard Gilmore
Part V. Monsters and Zombies 16 Dead and Alive: Austen’s Role in Mashup Literature -- Amanda Riter 17 Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Regency, Repression, and Roundhouse Kicks -- Andrea Zanin 18 “Till This Moment I Never Knew Myself”: On Identities and Zombies -- A.G. Holdier