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Jane Austen (1775-1817)

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Title: Jane Austen (1775-1817)


1
Jane Austen (1775-1817)
  • By Zheng boren

2
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3
INTRODUCTION
  • Jane Austen, English novelist, noted for her
    witty studies of early-19th-century English
    society.
  • With detailed descriptions, Austen portrayed the
    quiet, day-to-day life of members of the upper
    middle class. Her works combine romantic comedy
    with social satire and psychological insight.

4
  • Two common themes in Austens books are the loss
    of illusionsusually leading characters to a more
    mature outlookand the clash between traditional
    moral ideals and the everyday demands of life. In
    most of her novels, her characters correct their
    faults through lessons learned as a result of
    tribulation. Because of her sensitivity to
    universal patterns of human behavior, many people
    regard Austen as one of the greatest novelists of
    the 19th and 20th centuries.

5
LIFE
  • Austen was born in Steventon, Hampshire, England.
  • She was the seventh child of eight, and her
    family was close, affectionate, and lively. She
    lived most of her life among the same kind of
    people about whom she wrote.
  • Her lifelong companion and confidant was her
    older and only sister, Cassandra.

6
  • Dozens of relatives and friends widened Austens
    social experiences beyond her immediate family.
  • The Austens were devoted readers of novels at a
    time when reading novels was regarded as a
    questionable activity. They also provided a
    delighted audience for Janes youthful comic
    pieces, and later for her novels.

7
  • Jane had almost no formal education, but she read
    extensively and critically.
  • At age 13 she was already writing amusing and
    instructive parodies and variations on
    18th-century literaturefrom sentimental novels
    to serious histories.
  • By the time she was 23 years old, Austen had
    written three novels Elinor and Marianne, First
    Impressions, and Susan, which were early versions
    of, respectively, Sense and Sensibility (1811),
    Pride and Prejudice (1813), and Northanger Abbey
    (1818). A fragment, Lady Susan, which scholars
    date between 1793 and 1795, most likely also
    belongs to this period, but it was not published
    until 1871.

8
  • In 1801 the family moved to the town of Bath.
    After Janes father died in 1805, Jane,
    Cassandra, and their mother moved several times,
    eventually settling in 1809 in the village of
    Chawton, very near Steventon. Austen lived and
    wrote there for the last eight years of her life.
  • Living a quiet life in the countryside, she kept
    her eyes steadily upon the people and incidents
    about her, and wrote about the small world she
    lived in.

9
  • She herself compared her work to a fine engraving
    made upon a little piece of ivory only two inches
    square. The comparison is true. The ivory surface
    is small enough, but the woman who made drawings
    of human life on it is a real artist.
  • All of Austens novels were originally published
    anonymously. Several of them went through two
    editions in her lifetime.
  • Pride and Prejudice was particularly praised, and
    Emma (1816) received a favorable review from
    English writer Sir Walter Scott, who was a
    prominent literary figure of the time.

10
About Her Works
  • Jane Austen began writing around the age of
    twelve. Her works were later published
    anonymously due to the prejudice again women
    writers then.
  • Sense and Sensibility, her first novel, tells a
    story about two sisters and their love affairs,
    but Pride and Prejudice, originally drafted as
    "First Impressions" in 1796, is the most
    delightful of Jane Austen's works and Northanger
    Abbey satirizes those popular Gothic romances of
    the late 18th century. Those are her first three
    novels in the period from 1795 to 1798, but it
    took her more than 15 years to find a publisher.

11
Assessment
  • Jane Austen has brought the English novel, as an
    art of form, to its maturity, and she has been
    regarded by many critics as one of the greatest
    of all novelists.
  • The Prince Regent was an admirer and kept a set
    of Jane Austen's novels in each of his
    residences. Sir Walter Scott and Robert Louis
    Stevenson praised her work and Tennyson, T. B
    Macaulay and Archbishop Whately compared her to
    Shakespeare.

12
Assessment
  • Critics included Charlotte Bronte and Elizabeth
    Barrett Browning who found her work limited.
  • Generally speaking, Jane Austen was a writer of
    the 18th century, though she lived mainly in the
    nineteenth century. She holds the ideal of the
    landlord class in politics, religion and her
    works show clearly her firm in the predominance
    of reason over passion, the sense of
    responsibility, good manners and clear-sighted
    judgment over the romantic tendencies of emotion
    and individuality.

13
Reference
  • www.allmovie.com
  • www.pemberley.com/janeinfo/janeinfo.html
  • www.goucher.edu/library/jausten/jane.htm
  • www.geocities.com/Athens/8563/
  • http//www.webschool.cn/yssx/wxez/03/01.htm
  • http//www.lnu.edu.cn/englishw/novel/a27.html
  • http//www.oklink.net/wgwx/novels/lingsan/pride/in
    dex.htm
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