Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 The Professional Woman Writer
- 2 Northanger Abbey And Sense And Sensibility
- 3 Pride And Prejudice And Mansfield Park
- 4 Emma And Persuasion
- 5 The Early Short Fiction
- 6 ‘Lady Susan’, ‘The Watsons’ And ‘Sanditon’
- 7 The letters
- 8 Class
- 9 Money
- 10 Making a living
- 11 Gender
- 12 Sociability
- 13 Jane Austen and literary traditions
- 14 Jane Austen on screen
- 15 Austen cults and cultures
- 16 Further reading
- Index
- Cambridge Companions to . . .
13 - Jane Austen and literary traditions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2011
- Frontmatter
- 1 The Professional Woman Writer
- 2 Northanger Abbey And Sense And Sensibility
- 3 Pride And Prejudice And Mansfield Park
- 4 Emma And Persuasion
- 5 The Early Short Fiction
- 6 ‘Lady Susan’, ‘The Watsons’ And ‘Sanditon’
- 7 The letters
- 8 Class
- 9 Money
- 10 Making a living
- 11 Gender
- 12 Sociability
- 13 Jane Austen and literary traditions
- 14 Jane Austen on screen
- 15 Austen cults and cultures
- 16 Further reading
- Index
- Cambridge Companions to . . .
Summary
Jane Austen inherited no obvious, no precisely defined tradition: not the classical canon which her brothers studied at school; not (like so many of her literary great-granddaughters and beyond) the canon as studied for a BA in English literature; not the full sweep of her predecessors in English fiction, many of whom remained unknown to her; not the intellectual framework offered by any regular course of study. ‘Her reading was very extensive in history and belles letters.’ It was steady and purposeful, yet in selection it was desultory. She was never in a position, even had she wished it, to work through the kind of subject-bibliography which Emma is always drawing up; instead, she was dependent on titles which happened to come her way.
What came her way was by no means negligible. She was luckier than some of her heroines: than Marianne Dashwood, who thinks her family library ‘too well known to me’ to provide ‘anything beyond mere amusement’ (SS 3:10:388–9), or Catherine Morland, who says, ‘new books do not fall in our way’ (NA 1:6:35). Austen’s first library, her father’s, ran to more than 500 books. Though her school experience was brief and insignificant, most of the usual school books were accessible at home. Most importantly, the whole family were avid book borrowers and book exchangers. Chawton, the scene of her most sustained and productive period of writing, had a better reading group than she had found at Steventon or Manydown, as she was at pains to point out. Her letters teem with every possible kind of reference to books: simple reports of what she or the family is reading; opinions; quotations applied sometimes straightforwardly but more often with multiple layers of irony; affectionately joking reference to details from novels in which she treats them just like actual life.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Jane Austen , pp. 192 - 214Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010
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