Book Read Free

Jane's Fame

Page 33

by Claire Harman


  26. Quoted in Parrill, p. 3

  27. Thompson, p. 210.

  28. Julian Barnes, Observer, 13 November 1983.

  29. Laurie Rigler, interviewed on a publisher’s website: http://us.penguingroup.com/static/html/romance/janeaustenaddict. html.

  30. Thread on The Archers Message Board, September 2006, www.bbc.co.uk/dna/marchers.

  31. ‘Balancing the Courtship Hero: Masculine Emotional Display in Film Adaptations of Austen’s Novels’, in Troost and Greenfield, p. 24.

  32. ibid., p. 6.

  33. Todd (2005), p. 117.

  34. Cossy, p. 17.

  35. At the ‘Austen and Contemporary Literature and Culture’ conference, Chawton House, June 2007.

  36. ‘Revved-up Austen’, Radio Times, 17–23 March 2007.

  37. ‘Austen’s Power: Jane addiction sweeps theaters, bookstores’, USA Today, 2 August 2007.

  38. Mary Ann O’Farrell, ‘Austen and Contemporary Literature and Culture’ conference, Chawton House, June 2007.

  39. Quoted by Garber, p. 205.

  40. Andrew Norfolk, The Times, 17 March 2007, http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article1527806.ece.

  41. ibid.

  42. http://blog/wired.com/tableofmalcontents/2007/03/jane_austens_em. html.

  43. CH, vol. 2, p. 67.

  44. Record, pp. 232, 231 and 220.

  45. Todd (2005), p. 87.

  46. Memoir, pp. 188–9.

  47. Letters, p. 202.

  48. ibid., p. 268.

  49. CR, vol. 1, p. 258.

  50. April 1811, Letters, p. 182.

  51. CH, vol. 1, p. 242.

  52. Todd (2005), p. 290.

  53. Letters, p. 275.

  54. Todd (2005), p. 118.

  55. Harriet Martineau’s diary, October 1837, quoted in CH, vol. 2, p. 136.

  56. Hill, p. viii.

  57. CH, vol. 2, p. 168.

  58. http://austenprose.wordpress.com/2008/05/30/my-personal-austen-does-reading-austen-make-me-a-better-person/.

  59. Braudy, p. 15

  60. Trilling, p. 44.

  61. Memoir, p. 162.

  62.14–15 January 1796, Letters, p. 3.

  63. Forster, p. 153.

  64. CH, vol.2, p.41.

  Index

  Adams, Oscar Fay 156, 162–3

  Agnes Grey (Brontë, A.) 125

  Alton, Hampshire 34, 76, 118, 221

  Andrews, James 145–6, 147, 178, 209–10, 253

  The Archers (BBC Radio) 262–3

  Arlington (Lister, T.) 94

  Arnold, Matthew 226

  Arthur Fitz-Albini (Brydges, S.E.) 30

  Ashe, Hampshire 16, 30, 306n53, 306n55

  Ashford, Daisy 194

  Asquith, Lady Cynthia 232

  Atlantic Monthly 166

  Auden, W.H. 226–7

  Augustan Review 270

  Austen, Anna see Lefroy, Jane Anna Elizabeth

  Austen, Caroline Mary Craven (JA’s niece) 14, 17, 65, 115–16

  on Andrews’ portrait of JA 147

  death of 151

  invaluable biographical assistant 133–5, 140

  and literary reputation of JA 128–30, 131, 132, 149

  manuscript items in possession of 122

  on publication of Austen-Leigh’s biography 148

  Austen, Cassandra (JA’s mother) 9, 11, 14, 16, 43, 59, 100, 114, 116 agitation about Leigh Perrot money 55

  death of 114

  family finances, difficulties with 48–9, 102–3

  Jane first child to die 81

  Mansfield Park, opinion on 64

  view of Jane’s literary gifts 85–6

  Austen, Cassandra Elizabeth (JA’s sister) 9, 13, 18, 44, 103–4, 105–6, 179, 223 annuity from Tom Fowle 49

  collaboration with JA on Mansfield Park 64

  correspondence from JA 61–2, 63

  death of 124

  early years with JA 11–12

  on ‘Elinor and Marianne’ 31

  engagement and tragedy for 35–6

  Fanny Knight and 46

  inheritance from JA 86–7

  JA’s last writing 79–80

  memo on timescale of JA’s compositions 41–2

  pious commemoration of JA 134

  posterity of JA, control over 111–19

  praises passed on by 59

  manuscripts left by 122, 137

  Pride and Prejudice, on publication of 57

  publishing losses, burden of 100

  Sense and Sensibility, on publication of 51–2

  sketches of JA 145, 146–7, 208, 210, 211–12, 253

  watercolour vignettes for JA’s ‘History of England’ 14, 194

  Austen, Cassandra (Cassy) Esten (JA’s niece) 128–9, 145, 146, 210

  Austen, Charles John (JA’s brother) 11, 13, 14, 49, 101 active and successful life at sea 55

  death of 124

  executor for Cassandra 115, 116

  naval career 179

  Pride and Prejudice, surprise at success of 62

  salary, lowish nature of 102

  treasures descended through 208, 223

  Austen, Colonel Thomas 152

  Austen, Edward see Knight, Edward (JA’s brother)

  Austen, Fanny Sophia (Frank’s daughter) 134

  Austen, Francis (Frank) William (JA’s brother) 11, 13, 14, 45, 54, 118, 179 attendance at JA’s funeral 81

  collaboration with JA on Mansfield Park 64

  death of 124–5, 132

  generosity with memorabilia of JA 124

  knighthood for 114

  marriage to Martha Lloyd 103, 114

  reports from JA to 58, 62

  resourcefulness of 123

  settlement for 102

  Austen, George (JA’s brother) 11, 44, 102–3, 124

  Austen, Revd George (JA’s father) 11, 13, 14–15, 19, 30–1, 49–50, 81 death of 44–5, 48–9

  encouragement for JA from 32–3, 42–3

  letter to publisher Cadell 133

  Austen, Henry Thomas (JA’s brother) 1, 19, 40, 48, 69, 72, 111, 115, 279 agent for JA 50–51, 57–8

  attendance at Jane’s funeral 81

  and Bentley, negotiations for JA’s copyrights 103–5, 114

  Biographical Notice (1818) 106–7, 108, 129, 138, 142, 149, 212

  business slump 75–6, 100–102

  collaboration with JA on Mansfield Park 64

  death of 124

  graduate of Oxford 11, 20

  and identification of JA’s authorship 59, 62 illness 67–8

  inheritance from JA 86–9, 115

  intimately knowledgable 132

  JA’s closeness to 13

  marriage to Eliza de Feuillide 35

  maximisation of Jane’s celebrity, efforts in 65–6

  Austen, Revd James (JA’s brother) 11, 13, 14, 24, 100, 102, 106, 279 ambition and talent of 17–18

  JA’s identity guarded by 59

  literary accomplishments and The Loiterer 19–23

  marriages of 34–5

  memorial poem for JA 82–3, 88

  middle-aged melancholy and stasis 54–5

  morbid sensibility, plagued by 138

  poem in celebration of publication of Sense and Sensibility 52

  Austen, Jane academic study of 156, 166–7, 201–3, 235–6, 240–42, 263–6

  accidental artist, promotion as 200–201

  American collections of memorabilia 223–5

  anonymity 52, 53–4, 59–60, 62

  appeal of, aspects of 4–6, 169–70, 246

  appropriation of ‘Austenlike’ qualities by other writers 93–5

  assertiveness 47–8

  audience, prose affected by consciousness of 46

  audience widening for novels of 155

  ‘Austen mania,’ surges in 6–7, 257

  as biographical subject 137–45

  biographies 155–6, 230–31, 233, 225–6, 232, 272

  birth and early life 11–12

  booksellers
and publishers, access to 42–3

  Brydges reminiscence of 108–9

  businesswoman 67–9

  Cassandra’s sketches of 145, 146–7, 208, 210, 211–12, 253

  centenary of death 187–9

  Chapman and works of 181–2, 191–4, 195–8, 201–2, 206–11, 232, 249, 271

  Charlotte Brontë’s criticism of 126–7

  charm of, reflected in characters 139, 161, 218–19

  ‘chick-lit’ appeal of writing 7, 248–9, 252–4

  Churchill and 217–18

  collaborative composition 64

  composition, timescales for 41–2

  confidence in works 34–5

  copyright concerns 47, 54, 56, 57–8, 63, 68–9, 99–100, 103–4, 114, 120

  criticisms of early reviewers 95–6

  ‘critic’s novelist – highly spoken of and little read’ 120

  cult status 162–4, 243

  death of 80, 81–2

  death of, 150th anniversary

  commemoration 232

  deference towards Cassandra 112–13

  Dictionary of National Biography (DNB) 157, 171, 205

  domestic humour 206

  drafting habit 50

  Emma, theatrical presentation of 219–20

  Englishness of 174, 180–81, 189–90, 230–31

  ephemera of, public interest in 149–50

  estate, dispersal of 86–7

  estate of 122–5, 127–8, 128–37

  experimentalism 37–9

  fame, effects of 66–7,

  elements of 10–11,

  temporary and localised 85–6

  family finances, difficulties with 48–9

  fans of 60, 113, 277–8

  fashionable interest in Sense and Sensibility 53

  father, death of 44–5

  feminism and 170, 234, 243, 253

  Fénéon and French appreciation 175–8

  film treatments of novels 189, 214–17, 251–2, 257–8, 260, 264–5

  funeral 81

  global phenomenon (and global brand) 1–4, 245

  Great War and popularity of writing 180–86

  half-forgotten niche writer 120

  Harding on 227–8, 233, 277, 278–9

  Hartley’s negativity on 186–7

  Henry James on 166–8, 200–201, 279–80

  ‘heteronormativity’ in works of 236–8, 250–51

  ‘husband-hunting butterfly’ 145 identity as author, revelation of 62–3

  ideologies and disciplines, alternative approaches to work of 227–9, 235

  illness 78–9

  illustrations in works of 159–60, 196–7, 214, 264

  images of 105–6, 209–14, 254, 257

  influence in America, Precaution and 97–9

  inspiration, doubts on 67

  internet and mass intimacy 276–7

  juvenilia 13–15, 20, 23–5, 45, 124, 132, 134, 193, 195, 238, 242, 272

  last writing 79, 149

  literary reputation, defences of 125–30

  love stories and mass appeal 246–52

  manuscripts, control over 76–7, 271–2

  manuscripts, publishing frustrations 37–8

  market worth, fall in 104–5

  marriage proposal from Harris Bigg-Wither 43–4

  mass market for 159, 243–5

  memorabilia 208–9, 222–3

  memorial poems for 82–3, 84–5

  memorial tablet in Winchester Cathedral 153–4

  modernity of 110, 205

  mother of romance 247–8

  ‘New Woman’ and writing of 170–71

  obscurity, period of 99–100, 120–21

  ‘overwriting,’ fear of 75–6

  perseverance of 41–2

  physical description of 88–9

  ‘Plan of a Novel’ 71

  popularity with Romantic contemporaries 110–11

  Portraits of, 152–3, 177, 209, 313n69

  posterity of, Cassandra’s control over 111–12, 113–16

  praise and appreciation from Sir Walter Scott for 73–4, 109–10

  Pride and Prejudice, triumph in publication of 57–9, 61–2

  Prince Regent ‘a great admirer’ 69, 74–5

  profession, attitude to 40–41

  public acknowledgement of authorship 81

  publication of work, early solicitation 32–3, 42

  readership, small expansion of 46, 93

  reading and early writing 12–13, 33–4

  Regency revival and 204–5

  republication by Bentley of novels 104–7

  reviews of Pride and Prejudice 61

  revision, method of 50

  revisionism on 226–9

  Russian success of novels of 96–7

  sales of Sense and Sensibility 54

  scale and boundaries in works of 142–3, 143–4, 199–200

  secrecy, myth of 9–10

  self-regulation as writer 46–7, 75, 83, 142–3

  Sense and Sensibility, publication of 51

  sex and romance, criticism of treatment of 249–50

  television treatments of works 252, 254–6, 258–60, 261–3, 265–6

  Tennyson’s admiration for 121–2

  therapeutic potential of writing 182–5

  timelessness of work 272–5

  vigilance over traits of others 83

  wasting of titles by 99–100

  working milieu, home context and 9–11, 142, 270–71

  worldliness of 234–5

  writing, early encouragement in 14–15

  writing circles, access to 42–3

  YouTube compilations 251–2

  Zeitgeist thing of 172, 263, 266

  Austen, Mary (Lloyd, wife of Frank) 35, 45, 132

  Austen-Leigh, Revd James Edward (JA’s nephew) 7–8, 35, 63, 157–8, 169, 178, 180, 195, 203

  attendance at JA’s funeral 81, 119

  biography of JA 130–31, 131–5, 136–8, 141–2, 144–5, 147–8;

  second edition 148, 150

  on boundaries and scale 143–4

  on character of JA 139

  criticism of biographical portrait 150–51

  death of 151

  draughtsmanship of 106

  on James Austen and The Loiterer 20–21

  on JA’s ‘parental’ interest in characters 271

  and literary reputation of JA 128–30

  memorial tablet to Jane, erection of 153–4

  memories of youth 57

  on scale and Jane’s ‘little bit of Ivory’ 142–3

  writing and corresponding with JA 65

  Austen-Leigh, L.A. 194

  Austen Leigh, Lois 210

  Austen-Leigh, Mary Augusta 76, 121, 125, 130, 179–80

  Austen-Leigh, Richard Arthur 180, 209

  Austen-Leigh, William 180, 194

  Austen Papers (Austen-Leigh, R.A.) 180

  Austenolatry 279

  Austin, Alfred 182

  Bailey, John 204

  Baillie, Isobel 232

  Barnes, Julian 259–60

  Barron, Stephanie 266

  Basingstoke 34, 43–4

  Bath, Somerset 36–7 family move to 42–3

  Battleridge: An Historical Tale (Cooke, C.) 26, 28–9, 274

  Beckinsale, Kate 258, 259

  Becoming Jane Austen (Spence, J.) 261

  Becoming Jane (Julian Jarrold film) 261–2

  Belinda (Edgeworth, M.) 274

  Benn, Mary 58–9

  Bennett, Arnold 203

  Bentley, Richard 98–9, 103–5, 106–8, 114, 120, 149, 150, 151, 174

  Beresford, Charles 254

  Bessborough, Henrietta Spencer, Countess of 53

  Bibliography of Jane Austen (Chapman, R.W.) 196

  Bibliography of Samuel Johnson (Courtney, W.P. and Smith, D.N.) 181

  Bigg, Catherine and Althea 43, 111

  Bigg, Elizabeth 181

  Bigg-Wither, Harris 43–4, 111, 135, 181

 
Birrell, Augustine 194

  Birtwistle, Sue 254, 260–61

  Blackall, Revd Dr Samuel 35

  Blackwoods Magazine 92, 270

  Blessington, Marguerite, Countess of 93

  Bloomberg, Michael 268

  Blunden, Edmund 180–81

  Bonneville, Hugh 259

  Booth, Wayne 250

  Boringdon, Lady Frances see Morley, Frances, Countess of

  Boswell, James 181–2

  Brabourne, Lord see Knatchbull- Hugessen

  Bradley, A.C. 162, 180, 201, 202

  Bramstone, Mrs Augusta 64

  Braudy, Leo 10–11, 278

  Brett-Smith, H.F. 183, 185

  Bride and Prejudice (Gurinder Chadha film) 257

  Bridges, Elizabeth (Mrs Edward Austen) 35

  Bridget Jones’s Diary (Fielding, H.) 2, 252

  Bridget Jones’s Diary (Sharon Maguire film) 252–3, 259, 320n18

  Brinton, Sybil G. 266

  British Critic 52–3, 61, 72, 92

  Brock, C.E. and H.M. 159

  Brontë, Charlotte 6, 125, 126–8, 129, 139, 144–5, 166, 226, 260

  Brontë sisters 125, 128, 167, 188, 189, 214, 250

  Brown, John 121

  Brownlee, John 269

  Brownstein, Rachel 264

  Brunton, Mary 52

  Brydges, Charlotte 16

  Brydges, Mrs Elizabeth 16

  Brydges, Samuel Egerton 16–17, 29–31, 56, 77, 109, 111

  Bulwer-Lytton, Edward G.E.L. 94, 108, 109

  Burke, Henry Gershon and Alberta Hirsheimer 223–4

  Burney, Fanny (later Madame d’Arblay) 12, 26–9, 32, 54, 71, 98, 108, 129, 173, 201

  Burney, Sarah Harriet 110

  Burns, Robert 127

  Bury, Lady Charlotte 93

  Butler, Marilyn 233–4

  By a Lady (Elyot, A.) 266–7

  Byron, George Gordon, Lord 54, 61, 68, 73, 85, 87, 92, 93

  Bywater, Ingram 195

  Cadell, Thomas (publisher) 27, 32–3, 36, 37, 42, 57, 133

  Camilla (Burney, F.) 26, 27, 28, 32, 108

  Campbell, Thomas 104

  Carlisle, George Howard, Earl of 114

  Carlyle, Thomas 6, 200

  Carpenter, Lieutenant John Philip 222

  Carpenter, T. Edward 221–2, 223–4, 225

  Carrington, Dora 205

  Cartland, Barbara 247

  Castle, Terry 236–8

 

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