From Mrs Bennet in Pride and Prejudice who complains constantly about her “nerves” and is “taken ill immediately” when she is informed of Lydia’s elopement with Mr Wickham, to the never present but much discussed Mrs Churchill in Emma, whose illnesses the narrator notes “never occurred but for her own convenience”, hypochondriacs frequently appear in Jane Austen’s novels. Continue reading “What Do Hypochondriacs Eat?”
Author: Rebecca Selman
Muffins
The English muffin – the yeasty bread-like concoction as opposed to the American cupcake version that is more widely consumed nowadays – dates back more than two hundred years. Continue reading “Muffins”
Game for the Gentry
In my last post I discussed, with reference to Samuel Richardson’s 1740 novel, Pamela, the way food is frequently used as an indicator of social status in literature. Continue reading “Game for the Gentry”
Food and Social Status
From the groaning tables of King Arthur’s court in the fourteenth century poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight through to Mrs Portman’s pea soup in Thackeray’s short story, “A Little Dinner at Timmins” , food has been used by writers as an indicator of wealth and social status. Continue reading “Food and Social Status”