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Jane Austen News - Issue 76 - JaneAusten.co.uk
bicentenary

Jane Austen News - Issue 76

What's the Jane Austen News this week?  

  Austen's Letter Makes A Fortune!    We mentioned in last week's Jane Austen News that a letter written by Jane to her niece Anna Lefroy in 1812 was going to auction for the first time. In the letter Jane writes disparagingly of Rachel Hunter’s gothic novel Lady Maclairn, the Victim of Villainy, calling it “most tiresome and prosy” (although both Jane and Anna took great pleasure in reading the melodramatic, sensationalist, clichéd text; it seemed to be a case of the novel being so bad that it was good). Well the sale took place on July the 11th, and despite the estimation being between £80,000 and £100,000, the price which the letter eventually fetched was £162,000! Gabriel Heaton, Sotheby’s specialist in books and manuscripts, had a theory about why the letter did so well. “The vast majority of her surviving letters talk about her day-to-day life, so to have a letter like we do here, that talks specifically about writing and shows her engaging with the popular literature of the day, is hugely significant."
Celebrating July the 18th in Style! 
Fans all around the world spent July 18th celebrating Jane's bicentenary, and the Jane Austen Centre was no exception. We hadThe Jane Austen News celebrates the bicentenary! lots of visitors come to celebrate with us on the day, but for those fans who couldn't be with us, here's a little bit of what we got up to:
  • Two of the Centre guides, Alice and James, donned their best Regency costumes and headed out with photographer Owen Benson to take some shots around some of Bath's most iconic backdrops which Jane would have enjoyed (pictures soon!).
  • Martin, one of our experienced costumed guides, conducted free walking tours through the Georgian streets of Bath. These took in the places where Jane walked, shopped and visited, and the places made famous in her novels. The walk also passed the exciting new Jane Austen Floral Display in Bath's Parade Gardens.
  • At 11a.m. BST we held a minute's silence to officially mark the bicentenary of Jane Austen’s death and to reflect on Jane’s life and works.
  • Just after our minute's silence, micro-artist Graham Short presented us with a fifth Jane Austen £5 note, which he had engraved especially for the Centre. Graham caused a media storm last year, when he put into circulation four £5 notes which he had engraved with miniature portraits of Jane Austen, each valued at £50,000. His special fifth £5 note is now on display in the Centre.
  • After the presentation, Graham Short and some of the Jane Austen Centre guides popped upstairs to the Regency Tearooms for media interviews. (We'll share some of our best bits with you in next week's Jane Austen News).

Eau de Pemberley   
Jane Austen fans who visited the Renegade Craft Fair, which took place in L.A. on July 8th/9th, were surprised to find Eau de Pemberley. Immortal Perfumes are a company we'd not heard of before, but we love their premise. They are a micro-perfumery specializing in historically inspired, handmade perfumes. Their tagline is “Channel Marie Antoinette…or your favorite dead writer.” One of the scents they've created is one that we think we could quickly get hooked on - the scent of Pemberley after fresh rain. We just wish we could have been there to discover what it smelled like for ourselves!

 Was Jane Really Shy About Her Writing?  
The New York Time's Sunday Review has called into question once more the picture of Jane which was painted by the first biography written about her; that picture of Jane as a shy, nervous author who looked to her family for advice on her writing, as laid out by her nephew James Edward Austen-Leigh in his 1869 memoir. In his memoir of his aunt, James depicts his aunt as a shy, retiring author who wrote for her own pleasure, didn't dream of fame or money, and was so shy about her writing that she would hide her work whenever anyone came into the room. However, Devoney Looser, and many other literary critics, are out to prove that this image of a shy Jane doesn't really add up with the other evidence we have of her. These are two of our favourite points made by Devoney.
It couldn’t have been close family she feared would discover her. Many knew she wrote fiction; some helped her try to sell it. They produced their own literary work, too. It’s implausible that she set out to hide her writing from servants, who would have had greater access to her habits, conversations and possessions than some visiting family members. Yes, it’s true that Austen published her fiction without putting her name to it. But that was a common practice in her day, for men and women. New data suggests that 60 percent of novels published in this period didn’t carry the name of the author.
So what do you think? Shy and retiring? Or a nephew with an unreliable memory? Or something else entirely?

Persuasion According to The Guardian
Sam Jordison's Guardian vote, to find the Jane Austen novel he ought to read first in his Austen read-a-thon, decided that Persuasion was the one he had to look at first.
Well he has made a start and we thought we'd share some of his first thoughts with you (as Persuasion is the novel he will be looking at for the entire month of July he hasn't completed his full review yet).
So, here's a reminder of the opening line of the novel and what he had to say about it:
"Sir Walter Elliot, of Kellynch Hall, in Somersetshire, was a man who, for his own amusement, never took up any book but the Baronetage; there he found occupation for an idle hour, and consolation in a distressed one; there his faculties were roused into admiration and respect, by contemplating the limited remnant of the earliest patents; there any unwelcome sensations, arising from domestic affairs changed naturally into pity and contempt as he turned over the almost endless creations of the last century; and there, if every other leaf were powerless, he could read his own history with an interest which never failed."
They don’t make them like that any more. Just look at all those semicolons! What it must be to be able to arrange our unwieldy English language into such order and balance. It’s as if she’s trained an elephant to dance over a tightrope, then made it tell a joke as it pirouettes off the end. Better still, there are hundreds of pages of this stuff. We’re in the presence of a master – it’s going to be an excellent month.
He may not have been a huge fan before starting his Austen read-a-thon, but we suspect that he may well be before he's finished it!

Jane Austen Day with Charlotte Jane Austen News is our weekly compilation of stories about or related to Jane Austen. Here we will feature a variety of items, including craft tutorials, reviews, news stories, articles and photos from around the world. If you’d like to include your story, please contact us with a press release or summary, along with a link. You can also submit unique articles for publication in our Jane Austen Online Magazine. Don’t miss our latest news – become a Jane Austen Member and receive a digest of stories, articles and news every week. You will also be able to access our online Magazine with over 1000 articles, test your knowledge with our weekly quiz and get offers on our Online Giftshop. Plus new members get an exclusive 10% off voucher to use in the Online Giftshop.

2 comments

[…] The parade began from the front of the Royal Crescent at 11am, and wound its way through the historic streets of Bath, finishing up at the beautiful Parade Gardens where a floral tribute to Jane Austen in this, her bicentenary year, has been on display throughout summer (you can read more about it in previous editions of the Jane Austen News here and here). […]

Jane Austen News - Issue 84

[…] Jane Austen News – Issue 76 – Jane Austen Centre […]

Austentatious Links: August 6, 2017 | Excessively Diverting

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