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In Jane Austen's novel Mansfield Park, an almost imperceptible smile from potential suitor Henry Crawford causes the protagonist Fanny Price to bluish; her embarrassment grows when she suspects that he is aware of it. This moment--in which Fanny not only infers Henry's mental state through his gestures, but also infers that he is drawing inferences about her mental state--illustrates what literary scholar George Butte calls "deep intersubjectivity," a technique for representing interactions between consciousnesses through which Austen's novels derive much of their social and psychological drama.<br/><br/>Which choice best describes the function of the underlined sentence in the text as a whole?