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Jane Austen For Dummies
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About This Book
Explains Austen's methods, motivations, and morals The fun and easy way(r) to understand and enjoy Jane Austen Want to know more about Jane Austen? This friendly guide gives the scoop on her life, works, and lasting impact on our culture. It chronicles the events of her brief life, examines each of her novels, and looks at why her stories - of women and marriage, class and money, scandal and hypocrisy, emotion and satire - still have meaning for us today. Discover
* Why Austen is so popular
* The impact on manners, courtships, and dating
* Love and life in Austen's world
* Her life and key influences
* Her most memorable characters
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Part I
Getting to Know Jane Austen, Lady and Novelist
In this part . . .
A n Austen blog claims that Austen is everywhere, and thatâs true. Austenâs writings are studied and analyzed by scholars, yet also loved by ordinary folks â this part explores why. Chapter 1 speculates about why Austenâs work, nearly 200 years old, continues to enchant and challenge readers. Granted, readers enjoy her novels for their charming heroines and good stories. But Austen also had certain expectations of her readers, readers who, like her, were a part of English society. Chapter 2 reveals the expectations of Austen as well as her contemporary readers by giving you a glimpse of what life was like in her world at her time. Chapter 3 gives you biographical info on Austen and her wonderfully witty and intelligent family who encouraged her writing from childhood on. And Chapter 4 discusses the writers she read who influenced her writing, as well as some of the persons she met who inspired her â after all, writers of fiction need to be somewhat voyeuristic!
Chapter 1
Introducing Jane Austen
In This Chapter
Itâs challenging to introduce someone who in a way âneeds no introduction.â Jane Austen isnât just the female writer from days gone by who writes love stories. Yet ironically (and Austen loved being ironic) sheâs the queen of the courtship novel and the originator of the Regency romance (courtship literature set specifically in Englandâs Regency period, 1811â1820, during which Jane Austen actually lived, as opposed to authors today who write Regency romances, copying Jane Austen). Sheâs a keen observer of her world (late-18th- and early-19th-century England), a subtle satirist (one who writes works that attempt to improve society or humanity), and a shrewd analyst of human behavior (a century before psychologists decided that observing human behavior was a reliable way to understand human beings).
Her small literary output of six major novels, two fragments of novels, about two dozen youthful pieces of fiction (later called her Juvenilia), and a novella, or short novel, is in inverse proportion to her popularity. Type her name into an Internet search engine, and within seconds you can explore nearly 13 million results. But reading a novel by Jane Austen is far more fun and enlightening than clicking through Internet Web sites. So, too, I hope, is reading this book.
Her novels are always selling. They inspire commercial films and television miniseries, as well as Broadway shows. Readers who canât get enough Austen buy dozens of sequels by authors who attempt to continue the events of her novels, which I believe she has already brought to closure. Her face, or the image thatâs believed to be an approximation of what she looked like, appears on tea mugs, T-shirts, computer mouse pads, and tote bags, prompting people who already own these items to buy more of the same items, but with Austenâs face on them. Writers attach her name to dating guides, which always strikes me as ironic: Sure, guys have always been guys, but Austenâs characters didnât date as we understand dating. (You can find more about how young people got to know each other in Chapter 6.) Writers also attach the Austen name to cookbooks, tea books, decorating books â anything writers and publishers can relate to Jane Austen. Thatâs because sheâs hot stuff today.
Identifying the Lady Writer
The current blog that âAustenâs everywhereâ would undoubtedly shock Austen because during her most productive writing years (1809â1816), even her readers didnât know her name. Her first published novel, Sense and Sensibility (1811), appeared with the title page reading âBy A Lady.â And her second published novel was no help because Pride and Prejudice was published with the byline âBy The Author Of Sense and Sensibility.â You can guess how the bylines of her other novels read: âBy The Author Of. . . .â
Do you see a pattern here? Being a lady meant more than being a courteous woman. A lady was a member of a social class called the gentry. This class owned land and was genteel. While some female (and note, I didnât write the word âladyâ just now) novelists had their names in their bylines, they usually explained that they wrote because of financial distress â an ailing husband or wastrel husband with a brood of young children to support, and so forth. But a lady didnât write for money; she wrote for personal fulfillment â though Jane Austen enjoyed making the money, too! At the same time, the cryptic byline preserved her anonymity, which Austen desired. The byline identifying the author as a âLadyâ also told the contemporary reader what to expect: a polite, well-mannered book with ladies and gentlemen as characters. And Austen didnât disappoint.
While Austenâs identity as an author was leaking here and there, it was only after Austenâs death at age 41 that the public finally discovered, through obituary notices, that Jane Austen was the âLadyâ who wrote Pride and Prejudice, Emma, and so on. Her literary executor brother Henry prefaced a âBiographical Notice of the Authorâ with her name and the titles of her four previously published novels listed in the first paragraph to a two-volume set of her first and final completed novels, Northanger Abbey and Persuasion, which were published together in January 1818. Finally her reading public knew her name.
Keeping a Personal Record
Just because Austen published anonymously didnât mean she didnât care about her books. On the contrary, she wrote letters that served as her personal thoughts about her works. In her letters she specifically called Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice her children. She kept lists of friendsâ and family membersâ comments about Mansfield Park and Emma. She happily reported in letters to family members when a novel was going into a second edition or when someone praised one of her books. Austen also wrote to her naval brother Frank, who was at sea, to proudly report earning a total of ÂŁ250 from her writing, ÂŁ140 of that from Sense and Sensibility, which had sold out its first edition, plus getting the copyright to it back (Letter, July 3â6, 1813). (For info on Austenâs writing and publishing, head to Chapter 3.)
But Jane Austen wasnât a publicity seeker. In another letter to Frank written the following October, she told him that the âSecretâ of her novel-writing was spreading. Whatâs worse, their talkative brother Henry, hearing Pride and Prejudice praised while in Scotland, blabbed in a moment of fraternal affection that his sister was the author. âI am trying to harden myself,â she writes to Frank. Saying this, she means sheâs trying to strengthen herself intellectually and emotionally to endure any publicity that follows.
Getting Reviewed
Austen found herself reviewed by not only the critics of her time, but also her family, friends, and future readers.
Checking out the comments from the critics of her day
During her productive, publishing years, Austen preferred life in her native county of Hampshire, surrounded by a loving family and dear friends of both genders. But her books were starting to get noticed by the critics.
While these arenât rave reviews, they were certainly encouraging to an author whoâd been writing since her adolescence and was now finally published at age 36.
The same publications as abovereviewed Pride and Prejudice in 1813. This time the reviews more fully praised Austenâs work. Calling it the best novel they had seen recently, the British Criticâs reviewer loved the way the author wrote the character of Elizabeth Bennet and praised the novelâs energy. The review concludes by encouraging the author to continue writing â which she, in fact, was. Austen completed Mansfield Park, while her publishers issued second editions of Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice â all by the end of 1813. The Critical Review opened its evaluation of Pride and Prejudice noting that the author presented an entire family that interested the reader, and echoing the British Critic by calling this novel the best of any theyâd recently seen that dealt with familiar, home life.
Commenting on the early reviewers
The two journals that reviewed Austenâs first two published novels used the typical criteria for literary evaluation: the bookâs morality and probability. Today, Austenâs work is considered realistic. That is, her characters represent human nature, which is always the same. Thus, the controlling Lady Catherine, the jealous Miss Bingley, and the manipulative Lucy Steele are all familiar because at one time or another, youâve met someone who behaves just like they do. But Austenâs characters arenât types; theyâre neither flat nor one dimensional. Each person is unique. So, while Pride and Prejudiceâs Miss Bingley is jealous of Elizabeth, her jealousy manifests itself very differently from Sense and Sensibilityâs Lucy Steeleâs jealousy of Elinor. Today Austenâs novels may be called psychologically realistic, which is why readers of the present can relate and respond to characters created in 1812.
Getting the big review for Emma
While Austenâs anonymous revie...
Table of contents
- Title
- Contents
- Introduction
- Part I : Getting to Know Jane Austen, Lady and Novelist
- Chapter 1: Introducing Jane Austen
- Chapter 2: Visiting Jane Austenâs Georgian World
- Chapter 3: Being Jane Austen (1775â1817)
- Chapter 4: Inspiring the Aspiring Novelist
- Part II : Austen Observes Ladies and Gentlemen
- Chapter 5: Practicing the Politics of Dancing
- Chapter 6: Playing the Dating Game: Courtship, Austen Style
- Chapter 7: Marrying: A Serious Business for Jane Austen and Her Characters
- Chapter 8: Wily Females and Seductive Males
- Part III : Living Life in Janeâs World
- Chapter 9: Looking at Ladiesâ Limited Rights and Roles
- Chapter 10: Being a Man in a Manâs World
- Chapter 11: Experiencing Life at Home in Austenâs Day
- Chapter 12: Minding Your Manners
- Chapter 13: Following Religion and Morality for Jane Austen and Her Times
- Part IV : Enjoying Austen and Her Influence Today
- Chapter 14: Reading Jane Austen
- Chapter 15: Bringing Austen Novels to Stage, Screen, and Television
- Chapter 16: Determining Austenâs Literary Descendents
- Part V : The Part of Tens
- Chapter 17: Ten Most Memorable Austen Characters
- Chapter 18: Ten Best Austen-Related Books (Besides This One!)
- Chapter 19: Ten Best Austen Places to Visit
- Chapter 20: Ten Best Austenisms (and What They Mean)
- Appendix: Jane Austen Chronology