interface ThemeComparison { theme: string; description: string; appearances: { novel: string; manifestation: string; examples: { quote: string; context: string; analysis: string; }[]; significance: string; }[]; } interface CharacterType { archetype: string; description: string; examples: { novel: string; character: string; analysis: string; evolution: string; keyQuotes: { quote: string; context: string; }[]; }[]; } interface WritingStyleElement { technique: string; description: string; evolution: { novel: string; usage: string; examples: string[]; significance: string; }[]; } export const themeComparisons: ThemeComparison[] = [ { theme: "Marriage and Economic Reality", description: "The intersection of marriage, economic necessity, and social mobility across Austen's works", appearances: [ { novel: "Pride and Prejudice", manifestation: "Marriage market and social climbing", examples: [ { quote: "It is a truth universally acknowledged...", context: "Opening line", analysis: "Establishes the economic premise of marriage in Regency society" } ], significance: "Direct examination of marriage as economic transaction" }, { novel: "Sense and Sensibility", manifestation: "Financial vulnerability of women", examples: [ { quote: "What have wealth or grandeur to do with happiness?", context: "Marianne's naive view", analysis: "Contrasts romantic ideals with economic reality" } ], significance: "Explores the harsh realities of women's financial dependence" } ] }, { theme: "Social Class and Mobility", description: "The examination of class boundaries and social movement in Regency society", appearances: [ { novel: "Mansfield Park", manifestation: "Class consciousness and moral worth", examples: [ { quote: "We have all a better guide in ourselves...", context: "Fanny's moral stance", analysis: "Links class position with moral character" } ], significance: "Explores the relationship between social position and moral integrity" }, { novel: "Northanger Abbey", manifestation: "Social climbing and authenticity", examples: [ { quote: "No one who had ever seen Catherine Morland in her infancy...", context: "Opening description", analysis: "Subverts expectations of class and heroism" } ], significance: "Questions the relationship between social status and personal worth" } ] } ]; export const characterTypes: CharacterType[] = [ { archetype: "The Witty Heroine", description: "Intelligent, spirited female protagonists who challenge social norms", examples: [ { novel: "Pride and Prejudice", character: "Elizabeth Bennet", analysis: "Combines wit with social observation", evolution: "Learns to balance judgment with understanding", keyQuotes: [ { quote: "I could easily forgive his pride, if he had not mortified mine", context: "Early judgment of Darcy" } ] }, { novel: "Emma", character: "Emma Woodhouse", analysis: "Uses wit but must learn its proper application", evolution: "Develops from clever manipulation to genuine understanding", keyQuotes: [ { quote: "I seem to have been doomed to blindness", context: "Moment of self-realization" } ] } ] } ]; export const writingStyleEvolution: WritingStyleElement[] = [ { technique: "Free Indirect Discourse", description: "Narrative technique blending character and narrator perspectives", evolution: [ { novel: "Northanger Abbey", usage: "Early experimentation with narrative voice", examples: [ "Commentary on Gothic conventions", "Catherine's naive perspectives" ], significance: "Develops ironic distance while maintaining character sympathy" }, { novel: "Emma", usage: "Sophisticated deployment for character insight", examples: [ "Emma's self-deceptions", "Social observations" ], significance: "Achieves complex character psychology and social commentary" } ] } ];