Jane Austen: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Double In-Law Marriage]]
* [[Double In-Law Marriage]]
* [[Fan Community Nicknames]]: "Janeites".
* [[Fan Community Nicknames]]: "Janeites".
* [[First Love]]: An important element in the novels of [[Jane Austen]], who uses the [[First Love]] trope often under the role of [[Wrong Guy First]], and her examples are as follows: In ''[[Pride and Prejudice]]'', Lizzy is infatuated with Wickham before she eventually realizes that he is not a decent person and that Darcy, a man she scorned, is a true gentleman. The concept of the first love is also humorously undermined when Mr. Collins rapidly transfers his affections from Jane to Lizzy to Charlotte Lucas. In ''[[Sense and Sensibility (novel)|Sense and Sensibility]]'', Marianne has to move past Willoughby before appreciating the worth of Colonel Brandon. Prior to the story beginning, Edward Ferrars has imprudently gotten engaged to Lucy Steele, which prevents him from courting Elinor. These are all examples of [[First Love|First Loves]] going wrong, but Austen also has a few examples among her repertoire of [[First Love]] turning out right: In ''[[Persuasion]]'', Anne's early romance with Captain Wentworth had been scuttled by her family, but she never forgot him. Their paths cross again years later and she has to watch him court others before eventually winning him back. In ''[[Emma]]'', Emma thinks she's in love with Frank Churchill, but when she discovers her true feelings for another she realises she never really loved Frank. Meanwhile, she persuades Harriet that her first love wasn't good enough for her, so Harriet sets her sights on various unattainable men before gratefully accepting her first love's proposal again. In ''[[Mansfield Park]]'', Edmund has to get burned by Mary Crawford before he recognises Fanny's worth and Fanny is almost tempted away from Edmund, her first love, by Mary's brother Henry.
* [[First Love]]: An important element in the novels of [[Jane Austen]], who uses the [[First Love]] trope often under the role of [[Wrong Guy First]], and her examples are as follows: In ''[[Pride and Prejudice]]'', Lizzy is infatuated with Wickham before she eventually realizes that he is not a decent person and that Darcy, a man she scorned, is a true gentleman. The concept of the first love is also humorously undermined when Mr. Collins rapidly transfers his affections from Jane to Lizzy to Charlotte Lucas. In ''[[Sense and Sensibility (novel)|Sense and Sensibility]]'', Marianne has to move past Willoughby before appreciating the worth of Colonel Brandon. Prior to the story beginning, Edward Ferrars has imprudently gotten engaged to Lucy Steele, which prevents him from courting Elinor. These are all examples of [[First Love|First Loves]] going wrong, but Austen also has a few examples among her repertoire of [[First Love]] turning out right: In ''[[Persuasion]]'', Anne's early romance with Captain Wentworth had been scuttled by her family, but she never forgot him. Their paths cross again years later and she has to watch him court others before eventually winning him back. In ''[[Emma]]'', Emma thinks she's in love with Frank Churchill, but when she discovers her true feelings for another she realises she never really loved Frank. Meanwhile, she persuades Harriet that her first love wasn't good enough for her, so Harriet sets her sights on various unattainable men before gratefully accepting her first love's proposal again. In ''[[Mansfield Park]]'', Edmund has to get burned by Mary Crawford before he recognises Fanny's worth and Fanny is almost tempted away from Edmund, her first love, by Mary's brother Henry.
* [[Foregone Conclusion]]: The lovers ''will'' get together and live [[Happily Ever After]]. The question is, how? (And as shown above, which lovers?)
* [[Foregone Conclusion]]: The lovers ''will'' get together and live [[Happily Ever After]]. The question is, how? (And as shown above, which lovers?)
* [[Genre Savvy]]
* [[Genre Savvy]]
* [[The Glorious War of Sisterly Rivalry]]: Perhaps most evident in her unfinished novel ''The Watsons,'' but seen at times in the others as well.
* [[The Glorious War of Sisterly Rivalry]]: Perhaps most evident in her unfinished novel ''The Watsons,'' but seen at times in the others as well.
* [[Gold Digger]]: Common in her fiction: often male, often subtle enough that modern readers might not even notice.
* [[Gold Digger]]: Common in her fiction: often male, often subtle enough that modern readers might not even notice.
* [[Good Looking Privates]]: Military officers appear in several of the stories, often described as quite handsome.
* [[Good-Looking Privates]]: Military officers appear in several of the stories, often described as quite handsome.
* [[Gossipy Hens]]: Sometimes portrayed sympathetically.
* [[Gossipy Hens]]: Sometimes portrayed sympathetically.
* [[Greed]]
* [[Greed]]
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* [[Regency England]]
* [[Regency England]]
* [[Rich Bitch]]: There's one in most of the novels, but of particular note is ''Emma'', where she's the heroine -- and there's a second [[Rich Bitch]] played straighter.
* [[Rich Bitch]]: There's one in most of the novels, but of particular note is ''Emma'', where she's the heroine -- and there's a second [[Rich Bitch]] played straighter.
* [[Romantic False Lead]]:
* [[Romantic False Lead]]:
** Everyone heroine has at least one. For [[Sense and Sensibility (novel)|Marianne]], there's {{spoiler|Willoughby}}; for [[Pride and Prejudice|Elizabeth]], {{spoiler|Wickham}}; for [[Mansfield Park|Fanny]], {{spoiler|Henry Crawford}}; for [[Emma]], {{spoiler|Frank Churchill}}; for [[Northanger Abbey|Catherine]], {{spoiler|John Thorpe}} and for [[Persuasion|Anne]], {{spoiler|William Elliot}}.
** Everyone heroine has at least one. For [[Sense and Sensibility (novel)|Marianne]], there's {{spoiler|Willoughby}}; for [[Pride and Prejudice|Elizabeth]], {{spoiler|Wickham}}; for [[Mansfield Park|Fanny]], {{spoiler|Henry Crawford}}; for [[Emma]], {{spoiler|Frank Churchill}}; for [[Northanger Abbey|Catherine]], {{spoiler|John Thorpe}} and for [[Persuasion|Anne]], {{spoiler|William Elliot}}.
** The boys often have one, too. [[Sense and Sensibility (novel)|Edward Ferrars]] has {{spoiler|Lucy Steele}}, [[Northanger Abbey|James Morland]] has {{spoiler|Isabella Thorpe}} and [[Mansfield Park|Edmund Bertram]] has {{spoiler|Mary Crawford}}.
** The boys often have one, too. [[Sense and Sensibility (novel)|Edward Ferrars]] has {{spoiler|Lucy Steele}}, [[Northanger Abbey|James Morland]] has {{spoiler|Isabella Thorpe}} and [[Mansfield Park|Edmund Bertram]] has {{spoiler|Mary Crawford}}.

Revision as of 06:21, 5 October 2014

/wiki/Jane Austencreator

English author who lived in the late 18th/early 19th century and wrote six novels between 1790 and 1817 before dying at the age of 41. Her books were published anonymously during her lifetime, but she is now one of the most famous authors in the English language.

Her novels all follow a similar formula: gentlewoman sooner or later falls in love with man but can't marry him because he's engaged to someone else/he's in love with someone else/etc. Often there are cads to tempt her as well, but ultimately she ends up with the good guy who won't steal all her money and/or abandon her somewhere. There's far more variety among her heroines in terms of personality, though. She specialized in two types: the lively, witty, restless heroine who never fears to speak her mind (Elizabeth Bennet, Marianne Dashwood, Emma Woodhouse); and the quiet, Stoic Woobie who rarely if ever speaks her mind since everyone misjudges her anyway (Elinor Dashwood, Fanny Price, Anne Elliot).

Austen is well-known for her wit, satire, and proto-feminism; serious critics consider her to be the equal of Cervantes, Milton, and Shakespeare. Virginia Woolf called her the first truly great female author, and the first good English author to have a distinctly feminine writing style. Rex Stout considered her the greatest English writer ever -- yes, even above Shakespeare. Heady praise from a man who claimed to have previously believed that men did everything better than women.

Jane Austen also has the distinction of being one of the few classic authors beloved by both the academy (her novels are a popular choice for School Study Media) and popular culture, thanks to the devoted Austen fan community who call themselves "Janeites." Her novels are also frequently adapted into films, especially Pride and Prejudice and Emma (which was also the inspiration for Clueless).

The novels, in order of publication:


Persuasion was published posthumously by her brother in a volume along with Northanger Abbey, although the latter was actually the first she completed (Jane herself often wondered why its initial publisher paid for the book and then didn't publish it). There's also lots of juvenalia that she probably didn't expect anyone to read (outside her closest family), let alone publish, and two unfinished novels called The Watsons, which she abandoned in the wake of her father's death, and Sanditon, left unfinished by her own death.

Appearances in other media:


Her novels provide examples of: