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If Aristotle Ran the Catholic Church

The Present Leadership Problem of the Church

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  • 180 pages
  • 7 hours of reading

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A Work in Progress This book is an attempt to refute Virginia Woolf’s comment on Jane Austen made in 1923 that "of all great writers she is the most difficult to catch in the act of greatness." My rebuttal is based on close examination of the pair of remaining manuscripts that show Jane Austen at work on full-length novels, the two chapters of Persuasion in the British Library and the fragment known as Sanditon now housed in King’s College Library, Cambridge. The diplomatic transcriptions replace the flawed work published by R. W. Chapman almost eighty years ago. In addition to the texts of these documents, I have analyzed the step-by-step process of composition, attempting to trace Jane Austen’s quill as she moved from first draft to "final" product, which may or may not have been what she would eventually publish. However, comparison of the Persuasion chapters with the text that appeared posthumously late in 1817 reveals many important similarities. Contrary to Virginia Woolf’s pronouncement, I believe that we can catch Jane Austen in the act of greatness.

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If Aristotle Ran the Catholic Church, William L. Forst

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2004
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