Jane Austen Works and Studies 1996 61
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Jane Austen's Reading
Jane Austen’s Reading: The Chawton Years Gillian Dow and Katie Halsey Of all the diversions of life, there is none so proper to fill up its empty spaces as the reading of useful and entertaining authors. Spectator 93 (16 June, 1711) Introduction to Jane Austen’s Reading The earliest description of Jane Austen‘s reading is Henry Austen‘s account in the ‗Biographical Notice of the Author‘ in the first edition of Northanger Abbey, published posthumously in December 1817. James Edward Austen-Leigh‘s Memoir of his aunt (1870) also describes her reading, drawing on the information in the ‗Biographical Notice‘. Henry and Edward focus firmly on authors considered in the nineteenth century to be ‗useful and entertaining‘. They both agree that she loved the works of Samuel Johnson, William Cowper, George Crabbe and Samuel Richardson, in particular Richardson‘s Sir Charles Grandison (1753-4). Henry Austen tells of her early infatuation with ‗Gilpin on the Picturesque‘, writing also that ‗her reading was very extensive in history and belles letters‘, and that she was ‗intimately acquainted with the merits and defects of the best essays and novels in the English language‘ (‗Biographical Notice‘, 330). James Edward suggests that what Henry had called ‗extensive‘ reading in history was actually ‗the old guides – Goldsmith, Hume and Robertson‘. He briefly alludes to her admiration of Sir Walter Scott‘s poetry and Waverley (1814), and quotes her joking determination to read no novels but Maria Edgeworth‘s, her relatives‘ and her own. James Edward then turns from Austen‘s reading: ‗It was not, however, what she knew, but what she was, that distinguished her from others‘ (Austen-Leigh, 78-80). -
The Watchers of Sanditon
The Watchers of Sanditon JULIET McMASTER Department of English, University of Alberta, Edmonron, AB T6G 2E5 I want to begin with that "close, misty morng" when Charlotte Heywood sallies forth from Trafalgar House with docile Mrs. Parker and little Susan to walk to Sanditon House, on their visit to Lady Denham. When they reached the brow of the Hill, they could not for some time make out what sort of Carriage it was, which they saw coming up. It appeared at different moments to be every-thing from the Gig to the Pheaton,-from one horse to 4; &just as they were concluding in favour of a Tandem, little Mary's young eyes distinguished the Coach- man & she eagerly called out, "T'is Uncle Sidney Mama, it is indeed." And so it proved. (Sanditon 425)' It's a bird! It's a plane! It's SIDNEy pARKER!-who is probably destined to be the hero of Sanditon.But seeing the hero is not easy: not for the heroine, and not for us readers either, who must rely on the heroine's young eyes to distinguish his identity and his place in the large pattern of events and characters that make up the novel. Jane Austen plays with that trope of identifying the hero elsewhere in her novels .In Sense and Sensibility, when Elinor and Marianne are out walking, they discem a man on horseback riding towards them. In a few minutes they could distinguish him to be a gentleman; and in a moment afterwards Marianne rapturously exclaimed, "It is he; it is indeed;-I know it is!" (SS 86), But she is "mistaken": it is Edward Ferrars, not Willoughby. -
Jane Austen's Work As Popular Culture Phenomenon
Jane Austen's Work as Popular Culture Phenomenon Bartolović, Ana Master's thesis / Diplomski rad 2012 Degree Grantor / Ustanova koja je dodijelila akademski / stručni stupanj: Josip Juraj Strossmayer University of Osijek, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences / Sveučilište Josipa Jurja Strossmayera u Osijeku, Filozofski fakultet Permanent link / Trajna poveznica: https://urn.nsk.hr/urn:nbn:hr:142:699412 Rights / Prava: In copyright Download date / Datum preuzimanja: 2021-10-02 Repository / Repozitorij: FFOS-repository - Repository of the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Osijek Sveučilište J. J. Strossmayera u Osijeku Filozofski fakultet Diplomski studij povijesti i engleskog jezika i književnosti Ana Bartolović Jane Austen's Work as Popular Culture Phenomenon Diplomski rad Mentor: doc. dr. sc. Biljana Oklopčić Osijek, 2012. Summary Jane Austen is considered to be one of the most brilliant British writers. Although she wrote only six novels, they are all highly praised and very popular. They are so popular that today one can find numerous film adaptations and fan fiction novels based on them. The first chapter deals with Austen, her life, family, relationships, and work. The second chapter is about her six novels, arranged here in the order in which they were published: Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, Mansfield Park, Emma, Persuasion, and Northanger Abbey. The third chapter reviews every film adaptation based on each of the novels. The fourth chapter deals with numerous novels written in the 20th and 21st centuries that are sequels, prequels, variations, or adaptations of Austen’s novels. There is also an extensive list of all those novels divided into categories according to the title of the book on which they are based on. -
Books Owned by Jane Austen's Niece, Caroline, Donated to Chawton House Library
VOL.1 No .4, 2015 Inside this issUE Books owned by Jane Austen’s House of Lords Tea niece, Caroline, donated to Chawton House Library N APRIL THIS YEAR, a North American Friend of Chawton House Library, Sandra Visiting Fellow Alexis Pogorelskin enjoys IClark, came to visit us all the way from afternoon tea with Baroness Williams of Crosby. Texas, bearing gifts. And what special gifts they are! They include a first edition of Frances Burney’s Camilla (1796), and a great many Improved Visitor Experience books to enhance our secondary collection, and our holdings on the Gothic novel. They also included a small collection of books once belonging to Caroline Mary Craven Austen (1805-80). Here, Executive Director Gillian The reference to Jane Austen’s acting skills came Numbers Dow discusses the importance of just one of back to me when I examined the donation from triple as the volumes in this collection, and looks at Sandra Clark. Because one of the books is a book new display what it can tell us about women’s reading, of French plays, an 1813 edition of Stéphanie- cases arrive education for girls, and women’s lives in the Félicité de Genlis’s Théatre à l’usage des jeunes early nineteenth century. personnes. All of Caroline’s books now forming part of the Chawton House Library collection When Sandra Clark came with her generous are delightful material objects. And in the case donation, I was thrilled to see the volumes once of this one, it is of particular interest, since it belonging to Caroline Austen. -
Jane Austen Article Version 1
56 Days: The Final Chapter of Jane Austen’s Life Jane Maxwell is a Cathedral Guide at Winchester with specialist knowledge of Jane Austen, and she is also a guide at Chawton House Library. In this article she has assembled some extracts of letters and writings, both from Jane and members of her family, which together tell the story of Jane’s last days in Winchester. On 24th May 1817 Jane Austen, accompanied by her sister Cassandra, departed from Chawton Cottage, and travelled to Winchester in the carriage of eldest brother James. They took up lodgings in the home of Mrs David, at No 8 College Street, the arrangements having been made by close friend Mrs Elizabeth Heathcote and her sister Miss Alethea Bigg. This was to be Jane’s home for the last 56 days of her life. As her life drew to a close, her letters related the intimate details of her final struggle. Fig 1 Jane Austen, rear view, by Cassandra Austen reproduced by kind permission of Belinda Austen 27th May 1817, Jane to nephew James Edward Austen: “I know no better way my dearest Edward, of thanking you for your most affectionate concern for me during my illness, than by telling myself as soon as possible that I continue to get better. I will not boast of my handwriting; neither that, nor my face have yet recovered their proper beauty, but in other respects I am gaining strength very fast. I am now out of bed from 9 in the morning to 10 at night – upon the sopha t’is true, but I eat my meals with Aunt Cassandra in a rational way and can employ myself, and walk from one room to another. -
Jane Austen: a Family Record: Second Edition Deirdre Le Faye Frontmatter More Information
Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-53417-8 - Jane Austen: A Family Record: Second Edition Deirdre Le Faye Frontmatter More information JANE AUSTEN: AFAMILY RECORD This book is the outcome of years of research in Austen archives, and stems from the original family biography by W. and R. A. Austen- Leigh, Jane Austen: her Life and Letters. Jane Austen: A Family Record was first published in 1989, and this new edition incorporates information that has come to light since then, and provides new illustrations and updated family trees. Le Faye gives a detailed account of Jane’s life and literary career. She has collected together documented facts as well as the traditions concerning the novelist, and places her within the context of a widespread, affectionate and talented family group. Readers will learn how Jane transformed the stuff of her peaceful life in the Hampshire countryside into six novels that are amongst the most popular in the English language. This fascinating record of Austen and her family will be of great interest to general readers and scholars alike. Deirdre Le Faye has been actively researching the life and times of Jane Austen and her family for the last thirty years. In 1995 she pre- pared a completely new edition of Jane Austen’s Letters. She has also written several other books: a short illustrated biography, Jane Austen (1998), Jane Austen’s ‘Outlandish Cousin’, the Life and Letters of Eliza de Feuillide (2002) and Jane Austen: The World of Her Novels (2002)as well as numerous articles in literary journals. © in this -
Henry James, Women Writers, and the Friendly Narrator
Misreading Jane Austen: t Henry James, Women :L Writers, and the i Friendly Narrator WILLIAM C. DUCKWORTH, JR. William C. Duckworth, a retired chemical engineer, has published articles on chemi- cal technology and English literature, as well as poetry. He now confines himself to literary endeavors. A legion of Jane Austen’s readers would agree when Mal- colm Bradbury observes that Jane Austen, “a great artist working in a small compass,” has constructed a reader who can recover from her novels an experience of life “as serious and intense as even Henry James could wish for” (186). However, Henry James would not have agreed. Though he assigned to her a high rank among novelists, saying that she is “shelved and safe for all time,” “close to reality,” and that “the tissue of her narrative is close and firm,” he spoke patronizingly of her unconscious wool-gathering, criticized the absence in her works of striking examples of com- position, distribution, and arrangement, and called her heroines “she-Philistines.” One is surprised by these severe criticisms of the novelist he called “dear old Jane Austen,” who devised and prac- ticed literary techniques that he later developed. Why did Austen fail to win a perceptive reader like James who was so indebted to her? An examination of James’s view of women writers and Austen’s narrative technique, and of the relation of these two fac- tors to Henry James’s criticisms of Jane Austen, will enable us to better understand James’s comments on his great predecessor. In a letter of 8 April 1883, James wrote to the publisher of 96 PERSUASIONS No. -
Jane Austen and Her Times
Jane Austen and Her Times G. E. Mitton Jane Austen and Her Times Table of Contents Jane Austen and Her Times.....................................................................................................................................1 G. E. Mitton...................................................................................................................................................1 Chapter 1: Preliminary and Discursive..........................................................................................................1 Chapter 2: Childhood.....................................................................................................................................9 Chapter 3: The Position of the Clergy.........................................................................................................14 Chapter 4: Home Life at Steventon..............................................................................................................21 Chapter 5: The Novels.................................................................................................................................34 Chapter 6: Letters and Posts.........................................................................................................................44 Chapter 7: Society and Love−Making.........................................................................................................49 Chapter 8: Visits and Travelling..................................................................................................................61 -
Abstract Jane Austen Uncensored
ABSTRACT JANE AUSTEN UNCENSORED: A CRITICAL AND PEDAGOGICAL STUDY OF AUSTEN’S LETTERS FOR THE COLLEGE CLASSROOM Amanda Smothers, Ph.D. Department of English Northern Illinois University, 2016 William Baker and Lara Crowley, Co-Directors A vast amount of literary critical and scholarly work on Jane Austen’s writing, including her juvenilia, has been published. However, insufficient attention has been paid to her extant letters and their significance. This dissertation redresses the imbalance and is the first extensive critical, scholarly discussion of Jane Austen’s correspondence and their pedagogical applications. In order to rectify the disparity, this dissertation examines Jane Austen’s surviving letters to determine how to contextualize them historically and biographically and in relation to her fiction for college composition and undergraduate literature courses. Background information on letter writing in the eighteenth and early nineteenth century provides context for Austen’s letter writing, comparing her content and style to common practices. This study also investigates the world of Austen’s letters, focusing on historical and biographical context, and scrutinizing the letters as a source of information about middle-class Regency England; Austen’s family and social circles; and the author herself, including her personality, attitudes toward current events, views on works of literature, and references to her writing and publication processes. Moreover, Austen’s letters would be beneficial as a theoretical pedagogical tool for teaching not only the novels but the world of her novels through an examination of her letters. Throughout my dissertation, previous work on teaching Austen and teaching with letters (both as a teaching tool and as a writing method) is incorporated, analyzed, and adapted. -
JANE AUSTEN Later Manuscripts
Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-84348-5 - Later Manuscripts Jane Austen Frontmatter More information the cambridge edition of the works of JANE AUSTEN later manuscripts © Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-84348-5 - Later Manuscripts Jane Austen Frontmatter More information Cambridge University Press and Janet Todd wish to express their gratitude to the University of Glasgow and the University of Aberdeen for providing funding towards the creation of this edition. Their generosity made possible the employment of Antje Blank as research assistant during the project. © Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-84348-5 - Later Manuscripts Jane Austen Frontmatter More information the cambridge edition of the works of JANE AUSTEN general editor: Janet Todd, Lucy Cavendish College, Cambridge and University of Aberdeen editorial board Marilyn Butler, University of Oxford Alistair Duckworth, University of Florida Isobel Grundy, University of Alberta Claudia Johnson, Princeton University Jerome McGann, University of Virginia Deirdre Le Faye, independent scholar Linda Bree, Cambridge University Press volumes in this series Juvenilia edited by Peter Sabor Northanger Abbey edited by Barbara Benedict and Deirdre Le Faye Sense and Sensibility edited by Edward Copeland Pride and Prejudice edited by Pat Rogers Mansfield Park edited by John Wiltshire Emma edited by Richard Cronin and Dorothy McMillan Persuasion edited by Janet Todd and Antje Blank Later Manuscripts edited by Janet Todd and Linda Bree Jane Austen in Context edited by Janet Todd © Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-84348-5 - Later Manuscripts Jane Austen Frontmatter More information Frontispiece: First manuscript page of Jane Austen’s poem ‘When stretch’d on one’s bed’. -
A Gold and Gem-Set Ring, Jane Austen Expert Adviser's Statement
Case 4 2013/14: a gold and gem-set ring, Jane Austen Expert adviser’s statement Reviewing Committee Secretary’s note: Please note that any illustrations referred to have not been reproduced on the Arts Council England Website EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1. Brief Description Gold ring set with a turquoise (figs. 1, 2, 3). Made probably in the eighteenth century, possibly about 1760-80. In a nineteenth-century case bearing the name of T. West, goldsmith of Ludgate Street, London. Accompanied by papers documenting the history of the ring within the family of Jane Austen. Ring: width 17.5 mm.; height 8 mm. The ring is in excellent condition. It is fitted with a patent 9-carat gold device, probably late nineteenth or early twentieth-century, to reduce the size of the band, which does not affect the integrity of the ring. It could readily be removed, but might also be seen as part of the history of the ring. 2. Context Provenance According to a note written by Eleanor Austen in November 1863 (sold with the ring; fig. 4), the ring belonged to Jane Austen (1775-1817). From Jane it passed to her sister, Cassandra, who gave it to her sister-in-law Eleanor Austen, second wife of the Revd. Henry Thomas Austen (brother of Jane and Cassandra), ‘as soon as she knew that I was engaged to your uncle’. Eleanor and Henry were married in 1820. From Eleanor (died 1864) the ring passed to her niece Caroline Mary Craven Austen (1805-1880), daughter of the Revd. James Austen, another of Jane’s brothers. -
Jane Austen and the Theatre Jane
Marian had been an orphan, a JANE AUSTEN near death after the betrayal by twin adopted by the Passmore fam- AND THE THEATRE Willoughby, to thereunitingofAnne ily, and while she was always on Elliott and Frederick Wentworth in Persuasion, Gay relays numerous loving terms with them, as the letters Penny Gay scenes and situations which confirm attest, she was also always haunted Cambridge: Cambridge University Austen's strong sense of 'theatre'. by her feeling ofmarginality: "I didn't Press, 2002 realize it hurt so much to be a foster- "The plays performed in the child and orphan." Above all, she JANE AUSTEN'S ~teventhnhome theatricals during was always hard up and bedevilled by Austen's childhood had a profound the double demands of single par- "OUTLANDISH influence on the young writer, alert- enthood and her writing career. COUSIN": ing her both to the seductive power Christ1 Verduyn has long since be- THE LIFE AND of the theatre and to the ambivalence come the pre-eminent Engel scholar LETTERS OF ELlZA of acting." Gay also makes reference and critic. In this volume she and her DE FEUlLLlDE to similarities in plots between some associate, Kathleen Garay, have as- of the popular plays ofAusten's time sembled an excellent selection of let- and her novels, but points out that Deirdre LeFaye, Ed. ters both to Marian and from her. what Austen does, however, is place London: British Library, 2002 Her letters are noteworthy for the her own ironic stamp on her charac- lasting impression they give of a ters and situations. wonderfully talented woman fully REVIEWED BY M.