The Jane Austen Book Club (28 page)

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Authors: Karen Joy Fowler

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1980—Vladimir Nabokov
43

Miss Austen's is not a violently vivid masterpiece. . . .
Mansfield Park
 . . . is the work of a lady and the game of a child. But from that workbasket comes exquisite needlework art, and there is a streak of marvelous genius in that child.

1984—Fay Weldon
44

I also think . . . that the reason no one married her was the same reason Crosby didn't publish
Northanger Abbey.
It was just all too much. Something truly frightening rumbled there beneath the bubbling mirth: something capable of taking the world by its heels, and shaking it.

1989—Katha Pollitt, from her poem “Rereading Jane Austen's Novels”
45

This time round, they didn't seem so comic.

Mama is foolish, dim or dead. Papa's

a sort of genial, pampered lunatic.

No one thinks of anything but class.

1989—Christopher Kent
46

An Oxford tutor, H. F. Brett-Smith, served during World War I as an advisor to hospitals on reading matter for wounded soldiers. “For the severely shell-shocked,” a former student recalled, “he selected Jane Austen.” . . .

While the French Revolution raged, Jane Austen barely looked up from her literary petit point. Who better to soothe minds unhinged at Passchendaele or the Somme? In the therapeutic calm of her pages history's victims could escape from their nemesis.

1993—Gish Jen
47

I think the next writer to have a really big influence on me was Jane Austen.
Pride and Prejudice
was one of the books that I read backwards and forwards. I really wanted to be Elizabeth Bennet. Of course today, there are people who would say, “Oh, that's so Anglo”; they think I should have been more influenced by Chinese opera or something.

1993—Edward W. Said
48

Where
Mansfield Park
is concerned, however, a good deal more needs to be said. . . . Perhaps then Austen, and indeed, pre-imperialist novels generally, will appear to be more implicated in the rationale for imperialist expansion than at first sight they have been.

1995—Article about an essay by Terry Castle
49

Was Jane Austen gay? This question, posed by the normally staid
London Review of Books
, was the headline for an essay by Stanford professor Terry Castle that subtly explored the “unconscious homoerotic dimension” of Austen's letters to her sister Cassandra. The implication has caused quite a kerfuffle among Austenites.

1996—Carol Shields
50

Austen's heroines are compelling because in a social and economic system that conspires to place them at a disadvantage, they exercise real power. . . . We look at Jane Austen's novels . . . and see that her women not only know what they want, they have evolved a pointed strategy for how to go about getting it.

1996—Martin Amis
51

Jane Austen is weirdly capable of keeping
everybody
busy. The moralists, the Eros-and-Agape people, the Marxists, the Freudians, the Jungians, the semioticians, the deconstructors—all find an adventure playground in six samey novels about middle-class provincials. And for every generation of critics, and readers, her fiction effortlessly renews itself.

Each age will bring its peculiar emphasis, and in the current Austen festival our own anxieties stand fully revealed. We like to wallow in the accents and accoutrements of Jane's world, but our response is predominantly sombre. We notice, above all, the constriction of female opportunity: how brief was their nubility, and yet how slowly and deadeningly time passed within it. We notice how plentiful were the occasions for inflicting social pain, and how interested the powerful
were in this infliction. We see how little the powerless had to use against those who might hate them. We wonder who on earth will marry the poor girls. Poor men can't. And rich men can't. So who can?

1996—Anthony Lane
52

No burden weighs more heavily on a writer's shoulders than that of being much loved, but something unreachable in Austen shrugs off the weight.

1997—Editorial in
Forbes
53

“Drucker's not a management theorist in the narrow, academic sense,” says Lenzner. . . . “He compares the strategic corporate alliances with the matrimonial alliances in Jane Austen novels.”

1997—Susan M. Korba
54

For years, critics of
Emma
have been circling around the apparently disconcerting issue of the protagonist's sexuality. . . . Claudia Johnson finds that . . . “transparently misogynist, sometimes even homophobic, subtexts often bob to the surface of the criticism about her.” Johnson cites Edmund Wilson's ominous allusions and Marvin Mudrick's dark hints about Emma's infatuations with and preference for other women as examples of the unease aroused by this particular Austen heroine.

1999—David Andrew Graves
55

For the last two years I have been using software as a tool for analyzing texts for patterns in word sequence and word frequency. . . . From the viewpoint of word frequency by
semantic category,
Emma
stands as Jane Austen's lightest and brightest novel, strongly positive, and with the lowest incidence of negative feeling, just as she promised us from the very first sentence.

1999—Andy Rooney
56

I have never read anything Austen wrote. I just never got at reading
Pride and Prejudice
or
Sense and Sensibility.
They seemed to be the Bobbsey Twins for grown-ups.

1999—Anthony Lane
57

Nudity, sexual abuse, lesbianism, a dash of incest—will we never tire of Jane Austen?

2000—Nalini Natarajan
58

A “commonsense” perception on the popularity of Austen in India would point to the translatability of Austenian situations into the context of the emergent Indian middle class. . . . The issues raised by my metacritique, or reading of recent criticism of the Austenian daughter, while quite removed from the specificities of women's reform and its narrativization in colonial Bengal, suggest a paradigm within which to discuss the interlocking of two cultures.

2002—Shannon R. Wooden, on the Austen movies
59

Food control, a culturally pervasive defining feature of “femininity,” also pervades Ang Lee's
Sense and Sensibility,
Roger Michell's
Persuasion,
Douglas McGrath's
Emma,
and Amy Heckerling's
Clueless
. . . . Without exception the heroine does not eat. . . . Conspicuous food consumption invariably signals the “bad” or ridiculous woman.

2002—Elsa Solender, past president of the Jane Austen Society of North America
60

Having reviewed all the available films and critical reactions to them in the specialized libraries of London, Los Angeles, and New York, and having begged, bought, or borrowed a library of books and articles on adaptation from literature to film, I have reached one definitive conclusion about trying to re-create “Jane Austen's World” faithfully and authentically on film in a way to satisfy Janeites. In a single word: Don't!

2003—J. K. Rowling
61

I never wanted to be famous, and I never dreamt I would be famous. . . . There's a slight disconnect with reality which happens a lot with me. I imagined being a famous writer would be like being like Jane Austen. Being able to sit at home in the parsonage and your books would be very famous and occasionally you would correspond with the Prince of Wales's secretary.

NOTES

1.
Jane Austen,
The Works of Jane Austen
, vol. 6:
Minor Works
, ed. R. W. Chapman (Oxford, London, and New York: Oxford University Press, 1969), pp. 431–435.

2.
Ibid., pp. 436–439.

3.
B. C. Southam, ed.,
Jane Austen and the Critical Heritage
(London and New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1968), vol. 1, p. 40.

4.
Mary Russell Mitford,
Life of Mary Russell Mitford
, ed. A. G. L'Estrange (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1870), vol. 1, p. 300.

5.
David Lodge, ed.,
Jane Austen's Emma: A Casebook
(Houndsmill, Basingstoke, Hampshire, and London: Macmillan Education, 1991), p. 42.

6.
Southam,
Jane Austen and the Critical Heritage
, vol. 1, p. 106.

7.
A. J. Beveridge,
Life of John Marshall
(Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1916–1919), vol. 4, pp. 79–80.

8.
[Thomas Henry Lister], unsigned review of Catherine Gore,
Women As They Are
, in
Edinburgh Review
, July 1830, p. 448.

9.
T. J. Wise and J. A. Symington, eds.,
The Brontës: Their Friendships, Lives and Correspondence
(Philadelphia: Porcupine, 1980), vol. 2, p. 180.

10.
The Academy
, 1 (February 12, 1870), pp. 118–119.

11.
Southam,
Jane Austen and the Critical Heritage
, vol. 1, pp. 224–225.

12.
Anthony Trollope, “Miss Austen's Timidity,” in Lodge,
Jane Austen's Emma: A Casebook
, p. 51.

13.
Alice Christiana Thompson Meynell,
The Second Person Singular and Other Essays
(London and New York: H. Milford, Oxford University Press, 1921), p. 66.

14.
Willa Cather, “The Demands of Art,” in Bernice Slote, ed.,
The Kingdom of Art
(Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1966), p. 409.

15.
The Academy
, 53 (January/June 1898), pp. 262–263.

16.
Mark Twain,
Mark My Words: Mark Twain on Writing
, ed. Mark Dawidziak (New York: St. Martin's, 1996), p. 128.

17.
John Wiltshire, quoted in B. C. Southam, ed.,
Critical Essays on Jane Austen
(London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1968), p. xiii.

18.
Henry James, “The Lesson of Balzac,” in Leon Edel, ed.,
The House of Fiction
(London: Rupert Hart-Davis, 1957), pp. 62–63.

19.
The Academy
, 69 (November 11, 1905), p. 1171.

20.
The Academy
, 74 (January/June 1908), p. 622.

21.
Virginia Woolf,
A Room of One's Own
(New York: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1957), pp. 50–51.

22.
Gilbert Keith Chesterton,
The Victorian Age in Literature
(New York: Henry Holt, 1913), p. 109.

23.
Quoted in Christopher Kent, “Learning History with, and from, Jane Austen,” in J. David Grey, ed.,
Jane Austen's Beginnings: The Juvenilia and Lady Susan
(Ann Arbor, MI, and London: UMI Research Press, 1989), p. 59.

24.
Rudyard Kipling, “The Janeites,” in Craig Raine, ed.,
A Choice of Kipling's Prose
(London: Faber and Faber, 1987), p. 334.

25.
E. M. Forster, “Jane Austen,” in
Abinger Harvest
(New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1936), p. 148.

26.
Penelope Vita-Finzi,
Edith Wharton and the Art of Fiction
(New York: St. Martin's, 1990), p. 21.

27.
Arnold Bennett,
The Author's Craft and Other Critical Writings of Arnold Bennett
, ed. Samuel Hynes (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1968), pp. 256–257.

28.
Rebecca West,
The Strange Necessity
(London: Jonathan Cape, 1928), pp. 263–264.

29.
D. H. Lawrence,
Apropos of Lady Chatterley's Lover
(London: Martin Secker, 1931), pp. 92–93.

30.
W. H. Auden and Louis MacNeice,
Letters from Iceland
(New York: Random House, 1937), p. 21.

31.
Ezra Pound,
Letters from Ezra Pound
, ed. D. D. Paige (New York: Harcourt, Brace, and World, 1950), p. 308.

32.
Thornton Wilder, “A Preface for
Our Town
” (1938), in
American Characteristics and Other Essays
(New York: Harper & Row, 1979), p. 101.

33.
H. G. Wells,
The Brothers: A Story
(New York: The Viking Press, 1938), pp. 26–27.

34.
D. W. Harding, “Regulated Hatred: An Aspect of the Work of Jane Austen,”
Scrutiny
, 8 (March 1940), pp. 346–347.

35.
Quoted by Anthony Lane, “Jane's World,”
The New Yorker
, September 25, 1995, p. 107.

36.
Edmund Wilson, “A Long Talk About Jane Austen,”
The New Yorker
, June 24, 1944, p. 69.

37.
C. S. Lewis, “A Note on Jane Austen,” in
Essays in Criticism: A Quarterly Journal of Literary Criticism
, 4, no. 4 (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1954), p. 371.

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