Jane's Fame

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by Claire Harman


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  Hubback, J. H. and Edith C., Jane Austen’s Sailor Brothers (London, 1906).

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  James, Henry, ‘The Lesson of Balzac’, Atlantic Monthly, vol. xcvi (1905), pp. 166–80.

  Jane Austen Memorial Trust, Jane Austen’s House, Chawton, Hants, Foreword and Guide (n. d.).

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  Lane, Maggie, Jane Austen’s Family, Through Five Generations (London, 1984).

  Lane, Margaret, ‘Dr. Robert W. Chapman’, Times Literary Supplement, 6 August 1954.

  Lascelles, Mary, Jane Austen and her Art (Oxford, 1939).

  Lascelles, Mary, ‘Robert William Chapman, 1881–1960’, Proceedings of the British Academy, 47 (1961), pp. 361–70.

  Le Faye, Deirdre, Fanny Knight’s Diaries: Jane Austen through her Niece’s Eyes (Winchester, 2000).

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  Le Faye, Deirdre, A Chronology of Jane Austen and her Family (Cambridge, 2006).

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  Leavis, F. R. (ed.), A Selection from Scrutiny, 2 vols (Cambridge, 1968).

  [Lefroy, Anna Austen], Mary Hamilton, By a Niece of the Late Miss Austen (London, 1927).

  Leigh, Agnes, ‘An old family history’, National Review 49 (1907), pp. 277–86.

  L’Estrange, Rev. A. G., The Life of Mary Russell Mitford, Related in a Selection from her Letters to her Friends, 3 vols (London, 1870).

  Linklater, Eric, The Impregnable Women (London, 1938).

  [Lister, Thomas Henry], Granby. A Novel. In Three Volumes (London, 1826).

  Litz, A. Walton, ‘“The Loiterer”: a reflection of Jane Austen’s early environment’, Review of English Studies NS 12 (1961), pp. 251–61.

  Lodge, David, Changing Places: A Tale ofTwo Campuses (London, 1975).

  Lynch, Deidre (ed.), Janeites: Austen’s Disciples and Devotees (Princeton, 2000).

  Macaulay, Thomas Babington, Essays and Lays of Ancient Rome, new impression (London, 1899).

  Macdonald, Gina and Andrew (eds), Jane Austen On Screen (Cambridge, 2003).

  McMaster, Juliet and Stovel, Bruce (eds), Jane Austen’s Business: Her World and Her Profession (1996).

  Mack, Robert L. (ed.), The Loiterer: A Periodical Work in Two Volumes. Published at Oxford in the Years 1789 and 1790 by the Austen Family, with Critical Notes and an Introduction by Robert L. Mack (Lewiston, 2006).

  Malden, Sarah Fanny, Jane Austen (London, 1889).

  Mandal, A. and Southam, B. C. (eds), The Reception of Jane Austen in Europe (London and New York, 2007).

  Mansfield, Katherine, The Collected Letters of Katherine Mansfield, ed. Vincent O’Sullivan and Margaret Scott, 5 vols (Oxford, 1984–2008).

  Marshall, Mary Gaither (ed.), Jane Austen’s Sanditon: A Continuation by her Niece, together with ‘Reminiscences of Aunt Jane’ by Anna Austen Lefroy (Chicago, 1983).

  Miller, Lucasta, The Brontë Myth (London, 2001).

  Mudrick, Marvin, Jane Austen: Irony as Defense and Discovery (Princeton, 1952).

  Neagle, Anna, There’s Always Tomorrow (London, 1982).

  Nicholson, Andrew (ed.), The Letters of John Murray to Lord Byron (Liverpool, 2007).

  Oliphant, Margaret, ‘Miss Austen and Miss Mitford’, Blackwood’s Magazine, 107 (March 1870).

  Parrill, Sue, Jane Austen on Film and Television: A Critical Study of the Adaptations (North Carolina, 2002).

  Parsons, Farnell, ‘Jane Austen’s passage to Derbyshire’, CR 2002, pp. 34–9.

  Poovey, Mary, The Proper Lady and the Woman Writer: Ideology as Style in the Works of Mary Wollstonecraft, Mary Shelley and Jane Austen (Chicago, 1984).

  Proudman, Elizabeth, ‘The Essential Guide to Finding Jane Austen in Chawton’. Publication of the Jane Austen Society of North America (2003).

  Ragg, Laura M., Jane Austen in Bath (London, 1938).

  Raleigh, Walter Alexander, Sir, The Letters of Sir Walter Raleigh (1879–1922), Edited by Lady Raleigh, with a Preface by David Nichol Smith, 2nd and enlarged edition (London, 1926).

  Raven, James, Forster, Antonia and Bending, Stephen, The English Novel 1770–1829: A Bibliographical Survey of Prose Fiction Published in the British Isles, vol. 1, 1770–1799 (Oxford, 2000).

  Rhydderch, David, Jane Austen: Her Life and Art (London, 1932).

  Rogers, Pat, ‘Sposi in Surrey’, TLS, 23 August 1996.

  Sadleir, Michael, ‘Bentley’s Standard Novel Series: its history and achievement’, The Colophon, pt 10 (1932).

  Said, Edward, Culture and Imperialism (London, 1993).

&nbs
p; St Clair, William, The Reading Nation in the Romantic Period (Cambridge, 2004).

  Scott, Walter, Journal of Walter Scott, ed. J. G. Tait (1939).

  Selwyn, David (ed.), Collected Poems and Verse of the Austen Family (Manchester, 1996).

  Seymour, Beatrice Kean, Jane Austen: Study for a Portrait (London, 1937).

  Shields, Carol, Jane Austen (London, 2001).

  Showalter, Elaine, Sexual Anarchy: Gender and Culture at the Fin de Siècle (London, 1992).

  Smiles, Samuel, A Publisher and his Friends: Memoir and Correspondence of the Late John Murray, 2 vols, (London, 1891).

  Smith, Grover (ed.), Letters of Aldous Huxley (London, 1969).

  Southam, Brian (ed.), Critical Essays on Jane Austen (London, 1968).

  Southam, Brian (ed.), Jane Austen’s ‘Sir Charles Grandison’ (Oxford, 1980).

  Southam, Brian, Jane Austen’s Literary Manuscripts: A Study of the Novelist’s Development through the Surviving Papers, new edition (London, 2001).

  Stephen, Leslie, ‘Humour’, Cornhill 33 (1876), pp. 324–5.

  Sutherland, Kathryn, Jane Austen’s Textual Lives: From Aeschylus to Bollywood (Oxford, 2005).

  Taylor, Henry, Autobiography of Henry Taylor, 1800–1875 (London, 1885).

  The Bookman, vol. 21 (January 1902), ‘Jane Austen Number’.

  Thompson, Emma, Jane Austen’s Sense & Sensibility: The Screenplay and Diaries (London, 1995).

  Todd, Janet (ed.), Jane Austen in Context (Cambridge, 2005).

  Todd, Janet (ed.), The Cambridge Introduction to Jane Austen (Cambridge, 2006).

  Tomalin, Claire, Jane Austen: A Life (London, 1997).

  Trevelyan, G. O., Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay, 2 vols (London, 1876).

  Trilling, Lionel, Beyond Culture: Essays on Literature and Learning (New York, 1965).

  Troost, Linda and Greenfield, Sayre (eds), Jane Austen in Hollywood (Kentucky, 1998).

  Tucker, George Holbert, A History of Jane Austen’s Family (Stroud, 1998).

  Tuite, Clara, Romantic Austen: Sexual Politics and the Literary Canon (Cambridge, 2002).

  Twain, Mark, Mark Twain’s Notebook, ed. Albert Bigelow Paine (New York and London, 1935).

  Villard, Léonie, Jane Austen: A French Appreciation, Translated by Veronica Lucas from ‘Jane Austen: sa vie et son oeuvre’, with a New Study of Jane Austen by R. Brimley Johnson (London, 1924).

  Viveash, Chris, ‘Emma and Robert Donat’, CR, vol. 5, p. 338.

  Waldron, Mary, Jane Austen and the Fiction of her Time (Cambridge, 1999).

  Ward, William S., ‘Three hitherto unnoticed contemporary reviews of Jane Austen’, Nineteenth Century Fiction 26 (1971–2), pp. 469–77.

  Warner, Sylvia Townsend, Jane Austen (London, 1951).

  Warre Cornish, Francis, Jane Austen (London, 1913).

  Watt, Ian (ed.), Jane Austen: A Collection of Critical Essays (Englewood Cliffs, 1963).

  Williams, Mervyn, ‘Finishing The Watsons’, Report of the Jane Austen Society, 2002, pp. 14–20.

  Woodworth, Mary Katherine, The Literary Career of Sir Samuel Egerton Brydges (Oxford, 1935).

  Woolf, Virginia, The Common Reader (London, 1925).

  Notes

  Preface

  1. http://us.penguingroup.com/static/html/romance/janeausten addict. html

  2. New York Times, 30 January 1900.

  3. Independent, 26 May 2007.

  4. ‘The Jane Austen Syndrome’, Garber, pp. 199–210.

  5. ‘The Jottings of Sheikh Osama bin Austen’, http://www.feedsfarm.com/article/872310db33673d1295a18f07ae323dfa91116b4b.html and http://www.edsw.usyd.edu.au/research/networks/aele/resources/BROCK_Rebutting_Andrew_Leigh.pdf.

  6. CH, vol. 2, p. 19.

  7. Guardian, 19 July 2007.

  8. Copeland and McMaster, pp. 213 and 211.

  9. By Sylvia Townsend Warner, in her Diaries (London, 1994), p. 250.

  10. CH, vol. 2, p. 244.

  11. Tomalin, p. 285.

  12. http://thedelhiwalla.blogspot.com/2008/05/viewpoint-jane-austen-in-delhi.html

  13. Watt, p. 35.

  14. CH, vol. 2, p.41.

  15. Trilling, p. 42.

  Chapter 1: ‘Authors too ourselves’

  1. Memoir, pp. 81–2.

  2. Braudy, p. 15.

  3. 18–19 December 1798, Letters, p. 26.

  4. Isobel Grundy, ‘Jane Austen and Literary Traditions’, Copeland and McMaster, p. 190.

  5. Juvenilia, p. 180.

  6. Record, p. 64.

  7. 29–30 November 1812, Letters, p. 197.

  8. See the bibliography and notes to Selwyn, Complete Poems of James Austen.

  9. Juvenilia, p. 241.

  10. Record, p. 89n.

  11. ‘Lines Written at Steventon’, Complete Poems, p. 73.

  12. See her letter to her newly married granddaughter, Anna Lefroy, in 1814, Record, p. 218.

  13. The works in question are The Loiterer by James and Henry Austen; Edward Cooper’s Sermons; George Cooke’s Sermons; Cassandra Cooke’s Battleridge: An Historical Romance; James Henry Leigh’s The New Rosciad; Cassandra, Lady Hawke’s Julia de Gramont and the works of Egerton Brydges.

  14. Memoir, p. 90.

  15. See her obituary in Gentleman’s Magazine, vol. 74, pt ii, pp. 1178–9.

  16. Brydges (1834), p. 40.

  17. Sonnet XVI, Brydges (1785), n.p.

  18. Brydges (1834), p. ix.

  19. ibid.

  20. ibid., pp. 40–41.

  21. Memoir, p. 174.

  22. Complete Poems, p.4.

  23. ibid., p. 26.

  24. ibid., p. 20.

  25. Memoir, p. 16.

  26. Austen et al., no. 1, p. 4.

  27. ibid., p. 3.

  28. ibid., p. 4.

  29. ibid., no. 53, pp. 328–9.

  30. ibid., no. 9, p. 52

  31. Peter Sabor gives a very useful summary of the various arguments for and against the identification of Austen as ‘Sophia Sentiment’ in his edition of Austen’s Juvenilia, pp. 356–62.

  32. Austen et al., no. 60, p. 365.

  33. Tucker, p. 99.

  34. Austen et al., no. 1, p. 3.

  35. Some critics believe that these two plays could have been by James himself, but Peter Sabor’s noting of a manuscript change from ‘they’ to ‘it’ makes it much more likely that JA is referring to her own works. See Juvenilia, p.61 and notes.

  36. Juvenilia, p. 65.

  37. ibid., p. 71.

  38. ibid., p. 154.

  39. Mary Leigh’s ‘History of the Leigh Family’ and her husband’s note about her novel-writing are in the Leigh MSS at the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Records Office, DR 671/77a.

  40. Gilson, p. 89.

  41. See, for example, Cassandra Cooke’s unpublished letter to Fanny Burney d’Arblay of 22 November 1796, MS British Library, Egerton 3698, f. 127.

  42. Burney, vol. 3, p. 137.

  43. ibid, p. 140.

  44. For this, and connections between Camilla and other Austen works, see my Fanny Burney: A Biography, pp. 268–70.

  45. Critical Review, n.d., quoted in Raven et al., p. 778.

  46. Farnell Parsons, ‘Jane Austen’s Passage to Derbyshire’, Report 2002, pp. 34–9.

  47. Brydges, preface to Mary de Clifford, p. iv.

  48. Brydges (1834), p. 6.

  49. Brydges, Mary de Clifford, p. 208.

  50. P&P, p .403.

  51. Letters, p. 22.

  52. Brydges (1834), p. 10.

  53. Letters, p. 22.

  54. MS Morgan, 2911.

  55. Record, p. 104.

  56. P&P, p .41; NA, pp. 107–8.

  57. Letters, p. 26.

  58. St Clair, p. 249.

  59. Letters, p. 199.

  60. Cassandra Austen to Mary Lloyd, 30 November 1796, Record, p. 99.

  61. L’Estrange, p. 305.

  62. Record, p. 50.

  63. 8–9 January 1799, Letters, p. 35.

  64. Lett
ers, p. 44.

  65. Gilson, p. 24.

  66. NA, p. 30.

  67. CH, vol. 2, pp. 228–9.

  Chapter 2: Praise and Pewter

  1. Memoir, p. 106.

  2. Letters, p. 289.

  3. MS Morgan, 2911.

  4. For details of the 1800 pamphlet, see Gilson, item L3, and Laura M. Ragg, Jane Austen in Bath.

  5. See Memoir, p. 105 and n. and Gilson, p. 83.

  6. Letters, p. 174 and CR, vol. 5, pp. 78–83.

  7. Letters, p. 182.

  8. 24 January 1809, Letters, p. 169.

  9. Letters, p. 174.

  10. ibid., p. 175.

  11. Sutherland, p. 147.

  12. Memoir, p. 149.

  13. Letters, p. 202.

  14. ibid., p. 182.

  15. ibid., p. 186.

  16. Record, p. 188.

  17. CH, vol.1, p.35.

  18. Aspinall, p. 26.

  19. ‘Opinions of Mansfield Park: collected and transcribed by Jane Austen’, CH, vol. 1, p. 51

  20. Record, p. 191.

  21. Letters, p. 217.

  22. Complete Poems, p. 39.

  23. ‘Lines written at Steventon in the Autumn of 1814, after refusing to exchange that Living for Marsh Gibbon in the borders of Buckinghamshire & Oxfordshire’, Complete Poems, p. 71.

  24. Letters, p. 121.

  25. ibid., p. 76.

  26. Cooper (1815), pp. 262–3

  27. Letters, p. 322.

  28. Memoir, p. 27.

  29. 29 January 1813, Letters, p. 202.

  30. 29–30 November 1812, Letters, p. 179.

  31. Letters, p. 217.

  32. 29 January 1813, Letters, p. 201.

  33. For data here, see St Clair, appendix 1, and Jan Fergus, ‘The professional woman writer’, in Copeland and McMaster, The Cambridge Companion to Jane Austen.

  34. Letters, p. 201.

  35. Le Faye, Fanny Knight’s Diaries, p. 25.

  36. 24 May 1813, Letters, pp. 212–13.

  37. MS British Library, add. ms 41253, f. 17.

  38. CH, vol. 1, p. 8.

  39. ibid., pp. 42, 46–7.

  40. Letters, p. 213.

  41. Tomalin, p. 238.

  42. MS British Library, add. ms 41253, f. 19.

  43. 25 September 1813, Letters, p. 231.

  44. ibid., p. 250.

  45. 3–6 July 1813, Letters, p. 217.

  46. ‘Opinions of Mansfield Park’, CH, vol. 1, p. 50.

 

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