| PERENNIAL APPEAL OF JANE AUSTEN |
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| Written by Deborah Ground Buckner | |
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January 2008 Dorice Elliott, a professor of English at the University of Kansas with a Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins University, has a file several inches thick of “Jane Austen sightings.” This is an exercise in her class devoted to Austen's literary works, asking students to bring in Austen references found in the popular media. Among the examples is a Newsweek cover featuring “181 Things You Need to Know Now” with Miss Austen front and center. “The surge in interest is extraordinary,” Elliott says. Jane Austen is taking a place “that until five years ago was held by Shakespeare.”
There is much to be learned of social history from an Austen book. Austen's characters lived in a time of crucial social change from an agrarian to a business society where new opportunities for social advancement came into being. Her characters of the Gentry Class, supported by the land, could be viewed as “the lowest rung of the upper class” or “the highest rung of the lower class.” These women were well educated, brought up to be ladies, taught to speak and dress correctly, display good manners and follow the social rules, but they lacked a dowry. Marriage, in this era, was “much more than just who's in love with whom,” Elliott stresses. “Marriage was about the only choice these women got to make,” and it was a choice that determined not only their own standard of living, but their children's and perhaps their parents, too. The daughters of the gentry were placed in competition with middle class girls from families in trade, suddenly coming into money, but trying to marry into the gentry for social status. Marriage was a great game of maneuvers, as some “married up” while others married equals, and still others might “marry down socially, but up financially.”
Elliott observes “you never see physical intimacy in an Austen book.” It is a deliberate withholding—other writers of the time were not averse to including a kiss or embrace--”because she knew the reader can imagine it better than she could write it.” Elliott also identifies Austen's literary style, along with her subject matter, as a factor in her enduring appeal. Austen was one of the first writers to use “free and direct discourse,” combining the narrator's description of the character's thoughts with what the character says. Prior to this style, characterization came about in two ways, either through psycho-narration, where the narrator describes what the character is feeling but isn't going to say, or through “interior monologue,” where the character's thoughts are gleaned from his or her own words. Austen combined the narrator's voice with the character's thoughts, with phrases that sound like the character, but use the past tense and third person pronoun. The narrator and the character merge into almost one voice. This gives a window into the character's mind, both what she can articulate herself but also what her sub-conscious is thinking. The result achieves a level of intimacy and understanding with a character that readers were not accustomed to before Austen's works. Her use of dashes and exclamation points give “the feeling of stream of consciousness,” Elliott notes, a style of writing that is a precursor to the style of Virginia Woolf, for example.
The University of Kansas has included Jane Austen studies in its curriculum for some forty years. Elliott notes in the 1970s as feminist interest in women's literature escalated, many colleges and universities began offering Austen studies. Austen's decision to focus on women and their anxieties and concerns within their social and political settings keeps her work alive today as those concerns continue to have an impact. |
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