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Wednesday, November 30

Jane Austen Hits Iranian Book Shelves

This is an interesting news item contributed by Raquel Sallaberry from Jane Austen em Portugues:
The Persian translated biography of "Jane Austen" a work by Brian Southam has been marketed by Mahi in Iran. The book is penned by the ex-manager of Jane Austen Society who spent his life on researching the British author's life.

The book's translator Goli Emami has rendered other books including "Girl with a Peal Earring" by Tracy Chevalier, "Unaccustomed earth" by Jhumpa Lahiri and "‎The bell jar" by Sylvia ‎Plath.

The Persian translated biography of "Jane Austen" a work by Brian Southam has been marketed by Mahi in Iran in 112 pages.

It is a fact universally acknowledged that Jane Austen's great novels have penetrated every continent on this earth. Iran is one of the many, many countries to jump on board the Jane bandwagon.

Powdering Jacket

In 1790, Jane Austen was 15 years old. I wonder if she was familiar with the powdering jacket, worn when a woman's wig was being powdered and readied for a formal occasion. Read more about 18th century hair dressing at this post on Trouvais.
Ladies powdering jacket, c. 1790
Image @Trouvais

Tuesday, November 29

Jane Austen Actors in 1997 Jane Eyre Film

Oh, how I miss the A&E channel as it once was. Known as Arts and Entertainment, it introduced us to such shows as 1995s Pride and Prejudice and 1997s Jane Eyre. These days the network is known for Dog the Bounty Hunter, Intervention and Criss Angel Mindfreak. What a waste.

Samantha Morton as Jane Eyre
I had an opportunity to watch Jane Eyre recently, and had the pleasure of watching a few of my favorite English actors: Samantha Morton, Ciaran Hinds, Rupert Penry Jones, Elizabeth Garvie, and Gemma Jones. All have acted in a Jane Austen movie.

Samantha as Harriet Smith (1996)
Ciaran Hinds as Mr. Rochester
Ciaran Hinds as Captain Wentworth (1995)

Rupert Penry-Jones as St John Rivers

Rupert as Captain Wentworth (2007)

Elizabeth Garvie as Diana Rivers
Elizabeth as Elizabeth Bennet (1980)
Gemma Jones (center) as Mrs. Fairfax the housekeeper
Gemma as Mrs. Dashwood (1996)
Gemma (l) as Bridget Jones's mum (2001)

Wednesday, November 23

Happy Thanksgiving!

Gentle readers,

I am on a short hiatus as I celebrate Thanksgiving with my family. Happy holidays to all. - Vic

A Norman Rockwell Thanksgiving

Sunday, November 20

Mr. Palmer Discusses His Fellow Minor Characters

Gentle Readers, This month I have joined the Sense and Sensibility Bicentenary Celebration on Maria Grazia's My Jane Austen Book Club blog. Click on the banner on the sidebar to read the other articles posted each month in celebration of Jane Austen's first published book. The first half of my post about Mr. Palmer's observations of his fellow minor characters in the book sits here. The rest of the article sits on My Jane Austen Book Club. 

I, Thomas Palmer, Esq., have been charged to analyze and discuss the traits of my fellow minor characters in Sense and Sensibility, the first of six novels by Jane Austen. I shall endeavor to do JUSTICE to that estimable author's first published effort, which made its way to the public some 200 years ago and has never failed to be in print since.

I must first cast my thoughts upon Fanny and John Dashwood, whose miserliness oblidged the Dashwood women to leave their comfortable home at Norland to establish themselves in Barton Cottage and live a FRUGAL life in Devonshire amongst strangers. Miss Austen was a mere 20 years of age when she first conceived of this novel in epistolary form, first naming it Elinor and Marianne. That such a young author, whose knowledge of the world was CONFINED largely to books and the experiences of others, could create two such memorable characters as Fanny and John Dashwood portended her genius.

Fanny in particular is a character like no other in literature. Her manipulation of her weak husband in persuading him to abandon his PLEDGE to his father on that man's deathbed is breathtaking in its audacity and avarice. The sequence of her skewed logic and her husband's reaction to her CONTRIVANCE to preserve every pence of her darling son's inheritance is matchless. Even I could not have conceived of a more cynical, darkly humorous dialog than young Miss Austen presented through these two minor characters, thereby setting the novel's direction and tone. “People always live for ever when there is an annuity to be paid them.” One simply cannot add or take away a word to improve this utterance by Mrs. Dashwood.

The John Dashwoods represent, like so many minor characters, a FOIL – brilliantly conceived foils, to be sure – that are meant to contrast with other characters. Take my rather vulgar brother-in-law, Sir John Middleton, who is renowned for his generous impulses. Whilst the Dashwood ladies were figuratively shoved out of Norland by the John Dashwoods, Sir John, a distant relation, emerges from nowhere to offer them a hearth and home. The CONTRAST twixt the two Johns – one so weak and tight-fisted that he willing to break his vow to his dying father, the other so generous that he is forever inviting the entire neighborhood to sample the contents of his larder – cannot be ignored.

I next turn my gaze upon the Steele sisters, Lucy and Anne. Anne is a flat minor character who is doomed to learn nothing from life's experiences, but who interjects a running COMIC gag over her obsession with Dr. Davies (he will never offer his hand in marriage). Her main purpose in the novel is to REVEAL the engagement of Lucy to Edward at a most awkward moment.

Her sister Lucy, a smarter, prettier version of Anne, is as mean, cunning and scheming a creature as I have ever come across. I had her measure from the start, I assure you. Lucy's sole ambition is to ingratiate herself with her betters in order to take her place in SOCIETY. Knowing of Edward Ferrars' attraction to Miss Dashwood, she makes a preemptive strike by CONFIDING her secrets to Elinor, forcing our hapless heroine to LISTEN to matters that, while they pain her deeply, she must keep to herself. Many minor characters play the role of confidante to a novel's protagonist, but Lucy Steele turned the table on Elinor, forcing her to listen to matters that were most distasteful and hurtful. Our scheming Lucy more than turned the table on Edward, eloping with his younger brother Robert when it becomes apparent that the latter will INHERIT the Ferrars fortune of £1,000 per year. One can only cheer knowing that this feckless couple will always be dissatisfied with each other, always wanting more possessions.

To read the rest of the article, click here to enter My Jane Austen Book Club

Click here to read the other articles in this year long series:

1. January          Jennifer Becton    

Men, Marriage and Money in Sense and Sensibility

2. February      Alexa Adams         

Sense and Sensibility on Film

3. March            C. Allyn Pierson

Property and Inheritance Law in S &S 

4. April               Beth Pattillo

Lost in Sense and Sensibility

5. May                Jane Odiwe

Willoughby: a rogue on trial

6. June               Deb @JASNA Vermont

Secrets in Sense and Sensibility

7. July                Laurie Viera Rigler

Interview with Lucy Steele

8. August           Regina Jeffers       

Settling for the Compromise Marriage

9. September    Lynn Shepherd

The origins of S&S: Richardson, Jane Austen, Elinore & Marianne                                        

10. October       Meredith @Austenesque Reviews

Sense and Sensibility Fan Fiction

11. November   Vic @Jane Austen's World  

Mr. Palmer Discusses His Fellow Minor characters in Sense and Sensibility

12. December    Laurel Ann @Austenprose

Marianne Dashwood: A passion for dead Leaves and other Sensibilities

Tuesday, November 15

Jane Austen Inspired Bookmarks

Wonderful bookmarks available on Etsy! Click here for order information.
Persuasion inspired
Pride and Prejudice inspired
Sense and Sensibility inspired


Monday, November 14

Northanger Abbey # 1, Written by Nancy Butler: Marvel Comics GiveAway!!

Yes, you read the headline correctly. Jane Austen Today is giving away a copy of the first edition of Marvel Comics' Northanger Abbey!!


All you need to do is leave a comment about why you like comics and how long you have been reading them. (I started with Archie and Blondie, which tells you, ahem, how old I am!!)



Marvel Comics sent this description:


Marvel Introduces Jane Austen’s NORTHANGER ABBEY

Seventeen year old Catherine Morland craves the romantic life of a storybook heroine and when she finally has the chance to visit Bath – she’s convinced she’ll find the hero of her dreams. Join New York Times best-selling writer Nancy Butler (Sense & Sensibility, Emma) and Eisner Award winning artist Janet K. Lee (Return of The Dapper Men) as they bring to life one of Jane Austen’s most regarded stories like you’ve never seen before, Northanger Abbey #1! When the inexperienced Catherine falls prey to a conniving sister and brother, she’ll have to rely on her common sense to recuse her before her bad decisions keep her single. Does a storybook romance await our troubled heroine? Find out in Northanger Abbey #1, on sale today!

NORTHANGER ABBEY #1
Written by NANCY BUTLER
Art by JANET K. LEE
Cover by JULIAN TEDESCO TOTINO



To find a comic shop near you, call 1-888-comicbook or visit www.comicshoplocator.com

Marvel Entertainment, LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of The Walt Disney Company, is one of the world's most prominent character-based entertainment companies, built on a proven library of over 8,000 characters featured in a variety of media over seventy years. Marvel utilizes its character franchises in entertainment, licensing and publishing. For more information visit www.marvel.com

Click here to read our previous post on the subject!

Giveaway contest is over the day that my Northanger Abbey Marvel Comic arrives in my mail box!!

Interview with Dan Stevens, Hero of Downton Abbey

Downton Abbey Season 2 has come and gone for our British friends as American viewers eagerly await the start of the second series in January (on PBS).
Dan Stevens as Matthew Crawley (l) and Hugh Bonneville as Robert Crawley, Earl of Grantham (r)

In this interview, Dan Stevens discusses how this popular upper class soap opera has changed his life: Click here to read it.
Matthew Crawley in the trenches
Submitted by Raquel Sallaberry, Jane Austen em Portugues

Friday, November 11

The Song of Lunch: Sunday, November 13

Alan Rickman and Emma Thompson
Our favorite Colonel Brandon and Elinor Dashwood will be reunited in The Song of Lunch. Here is the synopsis on PBS:
When a middling copy editor/failed poet meets his former lover for lunch 15 years after their affair, he finds that everything — and nothing — has changed. From the tablecloths to the wine to his former lover, wealth and success now gloss the surface where kitsch and passion once held sway. He is bitter, petulant and increasingly inebriated; she is glamorous, generous, and eventually provoked. A dramatization of Christopher Reid's acclaimed narrative poem, The Song of Lunch stars Alan Rickman (Harry Potter films) and Emma Thompson (Sense and Sensibility, film version) in the unnamed roles of He and She. Waiter, I'll take the nostalgia special with a side of recrimination and finish with regret, for a lunch that celebrates love and ambition with poignancy, humor, and affection.

Wednesday, November 9

Wicked' author Gregory Maguire speaks about Jane Austen

Image @Jesse La Tour
Stephan Lee from EWs Shelf Life interviewed Gregory Maquire, author of Wicked and his latest installment of the franchise, Out of Oz. The following was one of his questions:

What’s a classic or much-hyped book that you’ve never quite understood the merits of?

That’s an easy one to answer. I don’t get everybody’s devotion to Jane Austen. I think Jane Austen makes great movies [laughs]. For a long time, I would have answered Pride and Prejudice as the book that I said I’d read but hadn’t, but I finally read it about a year ago, and I think Pride and Prejudice has some very funny parts, but to me, it’s about three times too long — and look who’s talking, somebody who writes 500-page novels! The humor in it is funny, but the situations seem to me very repetitive and run into one another, yet almost all the critics I know think that the great writers who I really do admire from the 19th and 20th century descended from Jane Austen — and we must all bow to her and kiss the hem of her garment — but I’ve never gotten it. I think I’m missing the Jane Austen molecule or something.

Huh?!! Try reading her books again, mister, and throw some Persuasion into the mix.


Image from the Internet Web Log of Jesse La Tour

Tuesday, November 8

Regency Garden Seat

This 19th century Ackermann print of an English country seat reminded me of something...
Garden seat from Ackermann's Repository

Ah, yes. The tent in Emma, 1996, under which Gwynneth Paltrow as Emma and Toni Colette as Harriet Smith are chatting and sewing.
Emma  and Harriet sit outside stitching. Emma 1996

Monday, November 7

Catherine Morland (Felicity Jones) Goes Modern

Gemtle Readers, We fell in love with Felicity Jones as Catherine Morland in 2007s Northanger Abbey. Only 23 when she made the film, we believed her performance as the very young, innocent Catherine. Now 27, look how beautiful and sophisticated she looks in modern garb:

Felicity in Proenza Schouler, Spring 2012 Collection
at the Motion Picture and Television Fund, Fall 2011
Felicity and Jessica Brown Findlay from Downton Abbey
in a fashion shoot
Modern Felicity vs. old-fashioned Felicity deserve a comparison: One is fetchingly innocent maid, while the other is a modern woman about town.

Felicity in Northanger Abbey, 2007
Felicity plays Anna in Like Crazy. Here is an NPR review of her latest film.

Sunday, November 6

Jane Austen Henry Tilney/Catherine Morland Throwdown

How many years apart are Henry Tilney and Catherine Morland of Northanger Abbey?






How Many Years are Henry Tilney and Catherine Morland Apart?
Six
Ten
Four
Five
Eight

  
pollcode.com free polls 

Wednesday, November 2

Jane Austen Knits!

Jane Austen Knits, Interweave’s latest special issue from the editors of Spin-Off magazine, explores the knits of the Regency Era in 144 pages packed with photography. Discover over 35 patterns inspired by the captivating stories surrounding one of the greatest writers to come out of this time – Jane Austen.

Jane Austen Knits gives you: 

  • A wealth of patterns ranging from scarves, shawls, cardigans, socks, and more with step-by-step instructions, diagrams and charts!
  • A look into the knitting world of Jane Austen, her novels, and the Regency Era with fun and enlightening articles.
  • A chance to work with luxurious yarns to create exquisite garments that you will love to wear.

Preorder the Magazine at this link!

Features:

  • Knitting to Austen by Amy O'Neill Houck
  • The Mighty Muslin by Susan Forgue
  • Jane's World in History by Susan Forgue
  • Sense and Sensibility Pattern Company by Joanna Johnson
  • Jane and Knitting by Sheryl Craig
  • Regency Fashion in Color by Meghan Fernandes
  • What Would Jane Knit? by Larissa Brown
  • Jane Austen, Multitasker, by Rebecca Dickson


Projects: Country

  • Linen Work Apron by Annie Modesitt
  • Short Stays by Larissa Brown
  • Fitz Fingerless Mitts by Catherine Shields
  • Pemberley Slippers by Kristi Schueler
  • Lydia Bennet Secret Stockings by Susan Strawn
  • An Aran for Frederick by Kathleen Dames
  • Georgiana Shawlette by Susanna IC
  • Modern Reticule by Heather Zoppetti
  • Frivolous Socks by Katie Franceschi


Manor:

  • Woodhouse Spencer by Jennifer Wood
  • Marianne Dashwood Stockings by Ann Kingstone
  • Lambton Top by Theressa Silver
  • Barton Cottage Shrug by Kristi Schueler
  • Elinor's Tea Cozy by Anne Berk, Valerie Allen, Jill Betts, and Elaine Blatt
  • Flower and Lace Cuffs by Carol Huebscher Rhoades
  • Fiori Pullover by Mary Annarella

Garden:

  • Northanger Abbey Hood by Catherine Salter Bayar
  • Elinor Tunic by Kristi Schueler
  • Scarlet Capelet by Heather Zoppetti
  • Chawton Mittens by Anne Blayney
  • Lydia Military Spencer by Annie Modesitt
  • Mr. Knightley's Vest by Jenny Sorensen
  • Frederick & Anne Scarf by Kirsti Johanson
  • Leafy Muff by Karen Holmes
  • Theme Scarf by Stephenie Gaustad
  • Variation Scarf by Stephenie Gaustad

Emma Shrug
Town:

  • Emma Shrug by Tian Connaughton
  • Josephine Shawl by Rebecca Blair
  • Meryton Coat by Stephanie Earp
  • Kensington Mitts by Annie Modesitt
  • Miss Morland's Neckcloth by Kendra Nitta
  • Miss Bennet's Beaded Bag by Joanna Johnson
  • Sense and Fashion Handwarmers by Hannah Poon
  • Diamond and Cross Reticule by Kendra Nitta
  • Evening Spencer by Corrina Ferguson
  • Picturesque Cape by Sharon Fuller
Submitted by Patty from Brandy Parfums

Tuesday, November 1

Stourhead in Fall: Setting of Pride and Prejudice 2005

Gentle readers, frequent contributor Tony Grant of London Calling sent this link showing the autumnal colors at Stourhead in Wiltshire. Fans of the 2005 film will recall Mr. Darcy's proposal to Elizabeth in the rain, while they are sheltered under the Temple of Apollo at Stourhead. This short BBC video shows how beautiful the gardens are this time of year.