Austen, Jane
U*X*L Encyclopedia of World Biography
|
2003
|
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company. (Hide copyright information)
Copyright
Jane Austen
Born: December 16, 1775
Steventon, England
Died: July 18, 1817
Winchester, England
English author, novelist, and writer
The English writer Jane Austen was one of the most important novelists of the nineteenth century. In her intense concentration on the thoughts and feelings of a limited number of characters, Jane Austen created as profound an understanding and as precise a vision of the potential of the human spirit as the art of fiction has ever achieved. Although her novels received favorable reviews, she was not celebrated as an author during her lifetime.
Family, education, and a love for writing
Jane Austen was born on December 16, 1775, at Steventon, in the south of England, where her father served as a rector (preacher) for the rural community. She was the seventh of eight children in an affectionate and high-spirited family. As one of only two girls, Jane was very attached to her sister throughout her life. Because of the ignorance of the day, Jane's education was inadequate by today's standards. This coupled with Mr. Austen's meager salary kept Jane's formal training to a minimum. To supplement his income as a rector, Mr. Austen tutored young men. It is believed that Jane may have picked up Latin from staying close to home and listening in on these lessons. At the age of six she was writing verses. A two-year stay at a small boarding school trained Jane in needlework, dancing, French, drawing, and spelling, all training geared to produce marriageable young women. It was this social atmosphere and feminine identity that Jane so skillfully satirized (mocked) in her many works of fiction. She never married herself, but did receive at least one proposal and led an active and happy life, unmarked by dramatic incident and surrounded by her family.
Austen began writing as a young girl and by the age of fourteen had completed Love and Friendship. This early work, an amusing parody (imitation) of the overdramatic novels popular at that time, shows clear signs of her talent for humorous and satirical writing. Three volumes of her collected young writings were published more than a hundred years after her death.
Sense and Sensibility
Jane Austen's first major novel was Sense and Sensibility, whose main characters are two sisters. The first draft was written in 1795 and was titled Elinor and Marianne. In 1797 Austen rewrote the novel and titled it Sense
and Sensibility. After years of polishing, it was finally published in 1811.
As the original and final titles indicate, the novel contrasts the temperaments of the two sisters. Elinor governs her life by sense or reasonableness, while Marianne is ruled by sensibility or feeling. Although the plot favors the value of reason over that of emotion, the greatest emphasis is placed on the moral principles of human affairs and on the need for enlarged thought and feeling in response to it.
Pride and Prejudice
In 1796, when Austen was twenty-one years old, she wrote the novel First Impressions. The work was rewritten and published under the title Pride and Prejudice in 1813. It is her most popular and perhaps her greatest novel. It achieves this distinction by virtue of its perfection of form, which exactly balances and expresses its human content. As in Sense and Sensibility, the descriptive terms in the title are closely associated with the two main characters.
The form of the novel is dialectical—the opposition of ethical (conforming or not conforming to standards of conduct and moral reason) principles is expressed in the relations of believable characters. The resolution of the main plot with the marriage of the two opposites represents a reconciliation of conflicting moral extremes. The value of pride is affirmed when humanized by the wife's warm personality, and the value of prejudice is affirmed when associated with the husband's standards of traditional honor.
During 1797–1798 Austen wrote Northanger Abbey, which was published posthumously (after death). It is a fine satirical novel, making sport of the popular Gothic novel of terror, but it does not rank among her major works. In the following years she wrote The Watsons (1803 or later), which is a fragment of a novel similar in mood to her later Mansfield Park, and Lady Susan (1804 or later), a short novel in letters.
Mansfield Park
In 1811 Jane Austen began Mansfield Park, which was published in 1814. It is her most severe exercise in moral analysis and presents a conservative view of ethics, politics, and religion.
The novel traces the career of a Cinderella-like heroine, who is brought from a poor home to Mansfield Park, the country estate of her relative. She is raised with some of the comforts of her cousins, but her social rank is maintained at a lower level. Despite their strict upbringing, the cousins become involved in marital and extramarital tangles, which bring disasters and near-disasters on the family. But the heroine's upright character guides her through her own relationships with dignity—although sometimes with a chilling disdainfulness (open disapproval)—and leads to her triumph at the close of the novel. While some readers may not like the rather priggish (following rules of proper behavior to an extreme degree) heroine, the reader nonetheless develops a sympathetic understanding of her thoughts and emotions. The reader also learns to value her at least as highly as the more attractive, but less honest, members of Mansfield Park's wealthy family and social circle.
Emma
Shortly before Mansfield Park was published, Jane Austen began a new novel, Emma, and published it in 1816. Again the heroine does engage the reader's sympathy and understanding. Emma is a girl of high intelligence and vivid imagination who is also marked by egotism and a desire to dominate the lives of others. She exercises her powers of manipulation on a number of neighbors who are not able to resist her prying. Most of Emma's attempts to control her friends, however, do not have happy effects for her or for them. But influenced by an old boyfriend who is her superior in intelligence and maturity, she realizes how misguided many of her actions are. The novel ends with the decision of a warmer and less headstrong Emma to marry him. There is much evidence to support the argument of some critics that Emma is Austen's most brilliant novel.
Persuasion
Persuasion, begun in 1815 and published posthumously in 1818, is Jane Austen's last complete novel and is perhaps most directly expressive of her feelings about her own life. The heroine is a woman growing older with a sense that life has passed her by. Several years earlier she had fallen in love with a suitor but was parted from him because her class-conscious family insisted she make a more appropriate match. But she still loves him, and when he again enters her life, their love deepens and ends in marriage.
Austen's satirical treatment of social pretensions and worldly motives is perhaps at its keenest in this novel, especially in her presentation of Anne's family. The predominant tone of Persuasion, however, is not satirical but romantic. It is, in the end, the most uncomplicated love story that Jane Austen ever wrote and, to some tastes, the most beautiful.
The novel Sanditon was unfinished at her death on July 8, 1817. She died in Winchester, England, where she had gone to seek medical attention, and was buried there.
For More Information
Myer, Valerie Grosvenor. Jane Austen, Obstinate Heart: A Biography. New York: Arcade Pub., 1997.
Nokes, David. Jane Austen: A Life. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 1997.
Tomalin, Claire. Jane Austen: A Life. New York: Knopf, 1997.
Tyler, Natalie. The Friendly Jane Austen: A Well-Mannered Introduction to a Lady of Sense and Sensibility. New York: Viking, 1999.
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Baldwin to sell parcel to help make Otay Ranch payments. (Baldwin Co. to sell off land in San Diego to raise cash)
Magazine article from: San Diego Business Journal; 8/27/1990; ; 700+ words
; Baldwin to sell parcel to help make Otay Ranch...000-acre Otay Ranch development, The Baldwin Co. is quietly looking for a buyer for...prime San Diego holdings. A month ago, Baldwin circulated marketing materials offering...
|
|
BALDWIN UNIFIES BRAND MARKETING.
Magazine article from: HFN The Weekly Newspaper for the Home Furnishing Network; 9/20/1999; ; 700+ words
; READING, Pa.-Baldwin stands for more than quality brass. That's the new message Baldwin Hardware Corp. is sending to the trade and consumers. For more than 50 years, the Baldwin name has been synonymous with high-quality...
|
|
Baldwin accused in jet sale
Newspaper article from: Honolulu Star - Bulletin; 7/24/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...indictment charging Kauai civic leader Gary Baldwin with four counts of theft and one...company that allegedly was owned by Baldwin -- Jet Services Corp. -- to Dulaney Eye Clinic in Phoenix. Meanwhile, Baldwin's friends and business associates...
|
|
BALDWIN PIANO TAPS AD AGENCY.(BUSINESS)
Newspaper article from: The Cincinnati Post (Cincinnati, OH); 5/7/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...Young & Rubicam has been selected to help Baldwin Piano & Organ Co. rekindle growth in what...public relations for the Loveland company's Baldwin, Chickering, Wurlitzer and Baldwin Pianovelle brands. Considered a leader in the...
|
|
Baldwin Technology at DRUPA "World's Fair" of printing equipment industry.
Business Wire; 5/26/1995; 700+ words
; ...BUSINESS WIRE)--May 26, 1995--Baldwin Technology Company, Inc. (ASE: BLD...Dusseldorf, Germany. Included was the new Baldwin IMPACT, an automatic press blanket cleaning...organic compounds into the environment. Baldwin also featured its high speed Enkel U...
|
|
BALDWIN: LET'S FIGHT FOR A PERFECT UNION LOTS OF VOLUNTEERS ARE HELPING OUT.(SATURDAY EXTRA)
Newspaper article from: The Capital Times (Madison, WI); 10/26/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...Anita Weier The Capital Times Tammy Baldwin's campaign for re-election is flowing...various events. "It's going great," Baldwin says. "There are not the usual little...Congressional Campaign. Johanson navigates Baldwin's white convertible down Interstate...
|
|
Baldwin pitches in the moment in minor leagues
Newspaper article from: Naperville Sun, The (IL); 7/4/2008; 700+ words
; ...hundred fifty innings from now, Burke Baldwin can't worry about where he will be on...shoulders. It's out of his control. Baldwin used to map out his career, but injuries...happens between those white lines," Baldwin said Thursday before his Burlington Bees...
|
|
Baldwin Catches Eye of Iowa Coach
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 2/28/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...but not Iowa counterpart Tom Davis. "Pat Baldwin," said Davis, "is a terrific player." Baldwin certainly was Saturday night when the Wildcats...Iowa City since 1963. Davis zeroed in on Baldwin before the game, giving offensive-minded...
|
|
BALDWIN TELLS COURT HE FEARED FOR SAFETY OF FAMILY IN TUSSLE.(News)
Newspaper article from: Daily News (Los Angeles, CA); 7/15/1998; 700+ words
; ...Alex Roth Daily News Staff Writer Actor Alec Baldwin testified Tuesday that a rough-and-tumble...his family. Cameraman Alan Zanger is suing Baldwin for assault in a scuffle outside Baldwin's Woodland Hills house in October 1995. At...
|
|
Baldwin restructures dealer network; $300,000 "buy-in" prompts 200 dealers to give up Baldwin, leaving a network of 80. "We only want committed dealers," says CEO Juszkiewicz. (Industry Forefront).
Magazine article from: Music Trades; 6/1/2002; 700+ words
; BALDWIN PIANO & ORGAN has effectively trimmed...canceled. With the new purchase requirement, Baldwin CEO Henry Juszkiewicz is Selectively renewing lapsed dealer agreements and reshaping Baldwin's distribution network. For a sizable...
|
|
Stanley Baldwin
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Stanley Baldwin Stanley Baldwin, 1st Earl Baldwin of Bewdley (1867-1947), was three times prime minister of Great Britain. He was involved in the settlement of the general strike of 1926 and in the abdication of Edward VIII in 1936. Stanley...
|
|
Baldwin, Roger Nash
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Roger Nash Baldwin Roger Baldwin (1884 – 1981) began his career as a social worker and...foremost figures associated with the protection of civil rights. Baldwin co – founded the National Civil Liberties Bureau in 1917...
|
|
Baldwin Technology Company, Inc.
Book article from: International Directory of Company Histories
Baldwin Technology Company, Inc. One Norwalk...244 million in sales in fiscal 1997, Baldwin Technology Company, Inc., is the leading...and packaging houses. Founding in 1918 Baldwin Technology was started in 1918 and remained...
|
|
Baldwin, Stanley
Book article from: A Dictionary of British History
Baldwin, Stanley (1867–1947). Prime...minister. Educated at Harrow and Cambridge, Baldwin entered the family ironmaster's business...years of Lloyd George's premiership. Baldwin made the key speech at the Carlton Club...
|
|
Baldwin, James
Encyclopedia entry from: U*X*L Encyclopedia of World Biography
James Baldwin Born: August 2, 1924 New York, New...author and playwright The author James Baldwin achieved international recognition for...rights movement. Early life James Arthur Baldwin, the son of Berdis Jones Baldwin and...
|