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Jane Austen

A Very Short Introduction

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Jane Austen wrote six of the best-loved novels in the English language, as well as a smaller corpus of works unpublished in her day, including three volumes of witty, non-realist juvenilia and the innovative, unfinished Sanditon. She pioneered new techniques for representing voices, minds, and hearts in narrative prose, and was a penetrating satirist of social tensions and trends in an era dominated by the French Revolution, the Napoleonic Wars, and the socio-economic disruptions entailed by them. Yet Austen struggled for many years to break into print, and even as she became a published author in the last years of her relatively short life, reading tastes and book-trade expectations constrained as much as they enabled her literary career. This Very Short introduction explores the major themes of Austen criticism through close analysis of her major and minor works, with particular emphasis on the literary, social, and political backgrounds from which the novels emerge, and with which they engage. Thomas Keymer combines critical introductions to each of Austen's six major novels with an exploration of the key themes in her works, from national identity to narrative technique. The Austen who emerges is a writer shaped by the literary experiments and socio-political debates of the revolution decade, drawn in her maturity to a fundamentally conservative vision of social harmony, yet forever complicating this vision through the disruptive ironies and satirical energies of her prose. ABOUT THE SERIES: The Very Short Introductions series from Oxford University Press contains hundreds of titles in almost every subject area. These pocket-sized books are the perfect way to get ahead in a new subject quickly. Our expert authors combine facts, analysis, perspective, new ideas, and enthusiasm to make interesting and challenging topics highly readable.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 18, 2020
      This meticulous treatise from Keymer (Poetics of the Pillory), an English professor at the University of Toronto, provides an effective overview of Jane Austen’s life and work. He begins by situating the reader in the physical world Austen inhabited, describing in detail the Elizabethan mansion where she stayed as a guest of her wealthy brother and the “snug little cottage” where she lived with her mother and sister and produced most of her writing. He then looks at the parodic, irreverent, and sometimes off-color writings she produced for her family’s amusement as a teenager, which are now viewed as evidence of her “disruptive instincts.” From here, Austen’s six published novels are dealt with in terms of major themes and relevant historical background—for Emma, he homes in on Austen’s concern with England’s “moral health and social wellbeing” in the decadent Regency era, and on the irony that she was compelled to dedicate the book to the man she held responsible for that decadence, the hard-living Prince Regent. Throughout, Keymer draws on Virginia Woolf’s views on Austen, whom the later novelist deemed the “forerunner of Henry James and of Proust,” particularly in relation to Austen’s final published work, Persuasion, whose protagonist Woolf saw as the “heroine with whom Austen most personally identified.” Janeites of all stripes should take note of this critically robust account.

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  • English

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