AustenBlog...she's everywhere

9 July 2004

Review of Edward Said’s last book

Filed under: Jane in the News — Mags @ 4:56 pm

Al-Ahram Weekly Online has a review of the last book written by Edward Said before his death last year. Said was a critic of what he considered colonialism in Western Literature, including in Jane Austen’s work.

Said brilliantly showed, in his earlier works, how Albert Camus and Jane Austen — in their esteemed novels — have dismissed, marginalised, or silenced the Other, thus reinforcing French and British colonial practice of the day. He pointed, in his sophisticated analysis, to how aesthetic considerations can play a dangerous role in manipulating the lens so that the focus is on the European master and not on the non-European underdogs. Said, of course, is grounded in English and European literatures and culture, to the point where such works as L’Étranger of Camus and Mansfield Park of Austen are part of his intimate reading and professional identity. But this did not stop him from showing the glaring absences in them, the imbalance at the centre of these works between the Self and the Other. Literary criticism has for decades not paid attention to such deflections and their significant implications. Yet, despite the deep affiliation Said feels for these writers, he nevertheless can be critical of how they contribute to distortions.

In quest of a cheap situation

Filed under: Jane in the News — Mags @ 4:42 pm

Jane Austen was mentioned in an article in the Financial Times on gentrification of urban areas.

As readers of Jane Austen will know, in 18th and 19th century England the gentry occupied an intermediate position in the class structure between the landed aristocracy, typified by Mr Darcy at the top, and yeoman farmers below.

The AustenBlog staff finds it interesting that the author, when casting about for a culturally-common example to describe social structure, hit upon Jane Austen’s work.

‘Jane Austen Book Club’ Author to speak at California book store

Filed under: Paraliterature — Mags @ 4:25 pm

From the Contra Costa Times (free registration required, or get a password at BugMeNot):

Residents are invited to join Karen Joy Fowler as she discusses her new book “The Jane Austen Book Club” at A Great Good Place for Books in Montclair Village. A reading and reception will take place from 7-8:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 5., at the store, 6120 La Salle Ave. Call 510-339-8210 for more details.

Livin’ La Vida Austen

Filed under: Jane in the News — Mags @ 4:20 pm

No television, no telephones, no Internet, but one hopes they won’t go so far as to preclude, say, penicillin. From the Detroit Free Press, on the autumn PBS lineup:

Say what? Get ready for “Regency House Party,” a supposedly classy PBS alternative to all those cheesy reality love and relationship shows. Ten men and women will live in a 200-year-old grand English country house and live by the social and dating customs of Jane Austen’s world. Oh dear, dear, dear.

 

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