AustenBlog...she's everywhere

4 September 2007

Proof, if we needed it, that Jane Austen Mania has gotten completely out of hand

Filed under: Online — Mags @ 2:22 am

Heather L. noticed this little item on eBay…

Several things:

1. Austin?

2. $900,000? Is this person taking strong medication?

3. It’s not a first edition; it’s a first edition thus, which is a different thing entirely. The Thomsons are getting a little spendy these days, but this is just laughable, even for a real first edition! Even with the other two books included!

4. Pray note the seller’s feedback score: a big fat hairy 0.

Everyone point and laugh. Go ahead, it’s okay.

Rob Hardy 1, Rudyard Kipling 0

Filed under: Online, Page, Poetry — Mags @ 2:13 am

We are delighted to report that AustenBlog reader Rob Hardy had a poem, “Jane Austen’s Toes,” published in The Apple Valley Review’s Fall 2007 issue. The poem (apparently inspired by a line in Carol Shields’ biography of Jane Austen) is quite lovely in our opinion and beats that Kipling fellow’s mash-poems about Jane all cold. Do check it out.

Yann Martel tries to make Stephen Harper a Friend of Jane

Filed under: F.O.J. (Friends of Jane) — Mags @ 2:10 am

Alert Janeite Alana sent us an article in the Ottawa Citizen that points to a rather interesting website in which Yann Martel, author of The Life of Pi, sends Stephen Harper, the prime minister of Canada, various books that he might like to read along with a letter explaining why it is of interest. The latest novel Mr. Martel chose was The Watsons, accompanied by a thoughtful letter.

But back to Jane Austen: boxed in, left only to play card games, look forward to the next ball and keep an eye out for eligible bachelors, surrounded by green pastures and rolling hills, does this strike you as promising grounds for great art?

Well, in the case of Jane Austen, it was. Because she had the great and good luck of having a loving and intellectually lively family, and she was blessed with a keen and critical sense of observation, as well as an inherently positive disposition.

Yes! We think this is often forgotten in the modern lust for melodrama. Some people are overwhelmed by tragedy and things going wrong in their lives, some struggle but get through, and some prefer to focus on the positive. Jane Austen always strikes us as having been a glass-half-full kind of person (admittedly perhaps a bit of projection, as we are the same way). If she was made unhappy by, oh, the failure to find her Mr. Darcy (gag), she didn’t wallow in it. Instead she turned it inside out and wrote hilariously funny novels. This is different from being some kind of Pagliacci, writing comedy as she despaired; her letters, the remembrances of her family, and most importantly her novels paint a picture of a relatively happy person. That does not diminish her genius. One really does not have to suffer for one’s art, you know, no matter what the poets and the lit-crits and the Hollywood filmmakers tell us.

The Jane Austen Book Club does the festival thang

Filed under: The Jane Austen Book Club — Mags @ 1:53 am

Alert Janeite Elizabeth posted in comments that the film will be screened at the Dietrich Theater’s Film Festival in Tunkhannock, PA. The screening will be on Friday, September 14, at 7 p.m. and reservations are required.

As we previously reported, the film also will be screened at the Toronto International Film Festival on Sunday, September 9 at 9:30 p.m. The Torontoist has a preview:

Most entertaining is Hugh Dancy (whose character’s adoration of science-fiction gives a “guy window” into a movie that’s obviously targeting a female audience), who gets laughs with just about everything he says or does on screen. Elsewhere, Jimmy Smits again shows that he improves any movie in which he appears

This all sounds good, and we’ll ignore some of the other bad jokes (we hope they were jokes) in the rest of the preview.

Improvements

Filed under: Online — Mags @ 1:38 am

Update your bookmarks: Jane Austen’s World has moved to new digs and has a beautiful new look to go with it. Ms. Place, the proprietress, also has created a complementary website indexing links and information presented at her blog. Check it out!

Everything is imitation if it’s not the real thing

Filed under: Stage — Mags @ 1:33 am

The Dallas Morning News has an article about the adapter of the stage production of Pride and Prejudice currently playing at the Dallas Theater Center.

“The other challenge is to put Jane Austen onstage so that she’s legible as Jane Austen, and at the same time create an actual theatrical experience,” the adapter says. “It is a novel, and the challenge is to create a correlative that has a theatrical vocabulary. We have a very limited amount of time and a limited number of people.”

Actually, by Dallas standards, the Theater Center has come up with a huge cast for this show. The two leads are recent graduates of Yale Drama School, and the other young people are mostly played by actors Mr. Wojewodski has taught since he came to Southern Methodist University. Some of Dallas’ leading professionals play the older roles, and two grandes dames from New York are portraying the dowagers.

This all sounds as it should.

Jane Austen fans can rest assured that Ms. Sheehy has been very faithful to the novel.

“I’m such an admirer of Jane Austen,” she says. “She essentially rescued my sanity when I had to commute between New Haven and New York. But I don’t read her imitators. Jane Austen’s mastery of language and insight into human nature can’t be mastered even if you get the Empire gowns right.”

Um, hon? You are one of the “imitators” now.

V.S. Naipaul: NOT a Friend of Jane

Filed under: Jane in the News — Mags @ 1:20 am

According to the Guardian’s review of V.S. Naipaul’s latest book, it includes the following comment about Jane Austen:

Jane Austen: ‘If the country had failed in the 19th century, no one would have been reading Jane Austen.’

This must be one of those things where you take something out of context and it changes the meaning, because frankly it makes no bally sense to us whatsoever.

Though our Inner 14-Year-Old Smart Aleck is dying to reply, “Yeah, well, good thing the country didn’t fail then, ain’t it?” And then stick its tongue out.

 

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