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How did Jane Austen come to write six novels that are still widely
regarded as some of the highest achievements of the genre? The
answer lies in understanding what Austen read, and how she read it.
Jane Austen the Reader shows how the books Austen read - and the
critical way in which she read them - influenced her writing, and
her artistic innovations. Austen's steadfast belief in the
possibilities of fiction sustained her through early rejection and
disappointment, and led to the creation of some of literature's
masterpieces. Austen devoured drama, history, poetry and novels,
but it was not just as a passive consumer looking for
entertainment, nor as a writer searching for ideas that Austen
engaged with literature. Rather, she was a critical reader -
investigating and evaluating literature, and articulating in her
own works her vision of what the novel could be.
Jane Austen the Reader explains Austen's excellence and endurance
by showing how her writing developed as a response to the writing
of others: as parody, satire, criticism and even, on occasion,
homage. Seeing Austen as a critic offers new insights into her
creativity, and new interpretations of her novels.
Schools have a mission of great importance to our nation; they are
responsible for keeping our children safe while educating them and
helping prepare them to be responsible and productive citizens. The
December 14, 2012, shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in
Newtown, CT, that claimed the lives of 20 children and 6 adults,
has heightened congressional interest in school security.
Policymakers have begun debating whether school security can be
further enhanced, and if so, how best to accomplish that goal. A
wide variety of proposals have been offered at the federal level,
such as funding for expanded mental health services for students,
funding for training on mental health awareness for school staff,
funding to assist schools in improving school climate, funding for
more school counselors, and funding for more school resource
officers (SROs) or other armed security personnel. Wayne LaPierre,
Executive Vice President and CEO of the National Rifle Association,
has proposed putting an armed police officer in every school in the
country as a way to prevent mass shootings. President Obama has
proposed creating incentives for Community Oriented Policing
Services (COPS) grants to be used to hire more SROs in the current
year. In addition, he has requested $150 million in funding for a
new Comprehensive School Safety Program. This new grant program
would provide school districts and law enforcement agencies with
funding to hire new SROs and school psychologists, among other
things. This book focuses on one of these proposals, the renewed
focus on providing federal funding for more SROs as a means to
preventing school shootings. It examines the distribution of and
current number of SROs, the potential sustainability of any
increase in the number of SROs, and the effect that SROs may have
on students and the academic setting. It also examines what
available research studies suggest about the extent to which SROs
may reduce school violence. These are issues Congress may consider
while contemplating an expansion of SRO programs.
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