The Penny Post Weekly Review
October 8, 2011
News /Gossip
An Amanda Vickery lecture at the Lewis Walpole Library: “Family Life Makes Tories of Us All: Love and Power at Home in Georgian England”:
Indie Jane blog – a pen-pal project – alas! missed the dealine – hopefully they will do it again! fabulous idea in this world of the lost art of the letter – http://indiejane.org/2011/08/dear-jane/
Musical cabaret duo: The Jane Austen Argument: why the name I wonder??
http://thejaneaustenargument.net/about/
A Musicologist Abroad blog by Vassar Professor Kathryn L. Libin: a few posts on Chawton http://blogs.vassar.edu/musicologistabroad/ . Prof. Libin is writing a book about Jane Austen and music. [from JASNA News]
Masterpiece Mystery: Kate Atkinson’s Case Histories starring Jason Isaacs as her Jackson Brodie begins on October 16th – see the upcoming schedule for all shows here: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/masterpiece/schedule/index.html
“The research by Lindeman’s wine found that Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen is the book most people lie about having read. But far from being highbrow, 47 per cent of us secretly prefer trashy novels which they would never put on show.” http://www.express.co.uk/posts/view/276005/Take-a-leaf-out-of-my-book-and-look-smart-Jane-Austen-helps-to-keep-up-appearances [do you think the remaining 53% are all Janeites? – though wait, we like “trashy” novels also!]
For you die-hard Colin Firth fans [do we talk to anyone who is not?] – one of his earliest roles in the 1986 7-part (!) BBC production Lost Empires can now be viewed on the just-released DVD! – here’s the story: http://blogs.bbcamerica.com/anglophenia/2011/10/05/lose-yourself-with-colin-firth-in-lost-empires/
Click here if you want to buy!
JASNA-New York has just published the fall issue of its newsletter Austen Chronicle: http://www.jasnany.org/newsletters/2011%20Fall.pdf
The Circulating Library
*You can view Jane Austen’s will at the National Archives, now on flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/nationalarchives/3507414978/
*This is an amazing gift from JSTOR: their early journals [i.e. before 1923] are now available online for free to anyone: read their announcement here: http://about.jstor.org/participate-jstor/individuals/early-journal-content
A quick look through one of the finds by a C18 listserv member: from George Washington’s Household Account Book 1793-1797:
http://www.jstor.org/stable/20085390
Pd to Chas. Kirkham for 18 pr. of gloves for Mrs. W. ……. 5.50
[18 pair of gloves!!]
[Image: freerepublic.com]
But enough frivolity – back to JSTOR: go to the main search screen and type in “Jane Austen” – 329 items come up – here is one example, a spot-on early 20th century review of Austen’s writings [though the author does do that “Bennett” misspelling thing!]
“Great-Grandmother’s Favorite Novel” by Warwick James Price. Sewanee Review 21.4 (1913): 480-89.
or this:
“The English Women-Humorists” by Alice Meynell. North American Review 181. 589 (1905): 857-72.
[tip on using JSTOR: go to the search results citation page and choose the “view pdf” option – the whole document comes up vs. having to scroll through each page; you can also do this from the search page]
- Authors:
Dickens’s Oliver Twist audio tour at The Guardian: http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/audio/2011/sep/23/dickens-audio-tours-oliver-twist-walk
I love this! Podcasts on forgotten books: http://www.reallylikethisbook.com/ – check out the piece on Helene Hanff’s 84 Charing Cross Road.
- Library Collections:
One can never get enough of searching the online collections of the Lewis Walpole Library http://www.library.yale.edu/walpole/index.html
or The Wellcome Library’s Medical History collections: http://library.wellcome.ac.uk/index.html
See the list of the collection of online 17th century recipe books [some are full text]: http://archives.wellcome.ac.uk/dserve/recipebooks/MS144.pdf
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Books I am Looking Forward to
*Joanna Trollope has signed on to re-write Sense & Sensibility in modern garb! [due out fall 2013]: http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/sep/13/joanna-trollope-rewrite-jane-austen
See her website here: http://www.joannatrollope.com/
*PD James – I wondered when she was going to get around to combining her love of Austen with a sure-to-be-great Austen-inspired mystery! – watch for Death Comes to Pemberley, due this November [you can pre-order online]: http://www.faber.co.uk/article/2011/9/death-comes-pemberley-announcement/
[if you have never read James’s “Emma Considered as a Detective Story” – you must find a copy immediately (the text is included as an appendix in her autobiography Time to Be in Earnest)]
*Facing Beauty: Painted Women & Cosmetic Art : by Aileen Ribeiro http://yalebooks.wordpress.com/2011/10/03/author-article-by-aileen-ribeiro-on-beauty/
and for more information on this title: http://yalebooks.co.uk/display.asp?K=9780300124866
*Samuel Park’s debut novel This Burns My Heart is written from the point of view of women in post-war South Korea – he explains this writing of women’s lives:
“I’ve spent my entire life deeply embroiled in the fantasies, desires and frustrations of my mother and my two older sisters. Their lives were so fascinating — they would spend hours talking about a crush. Not by coincidence, after I left them to go to college, I spent all my time in the library reading Jane Austen.
Museum Musings ~ Exhibition Trekking
*At the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge [UK], a new exhibit on Vermeer’s Women: Secrets and Silence: the title just smacks of Sense and Sensibility, doesn’t it?! And for those of us who have heard former JASNA president Marsha Huff give her talk on Austen and Vermeer, this book looks like a must-have – too bad the exhibition is only to be at the Fitzwilliam – it is sure to have Vermeers we have never seen.
You can order the book here:
US: http://yalepress.yale.edu/yupbooks/book.asp?isbn=9780300178999
UK: http://www.yalebooks.co.uk/display.asp?K=9780300178999
*Chatsworth House – there is a new exhibition space featuring the 6th Duke of Devonshire – through December 23, 2011: http://www.chatsworth.org/attractions/house/the-new-gallery-exhibition-space
You can also follow the Duke’s diaries on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/the6thdukeofdevonshire
Regency Life
Check this post on “The Gentle Art of Regurgitation During Travel” – at Booktryst [look closely!]
http://www.booktryst.com/2011/09/gentle-art-of-regurgitation-during.html
[image from the book: LePrince, Xavier. Inconvéniens d’un Voyage en Diligence. Douze Tableaux, Lithographiés par…Paris: Chez Gihaut Freres… et Sazerac et Duval, 1826]
London Historians: some very nice articles on Lord Nelson, etc. http://www.londonhistorians.org/?s=articles
Fashion exhibit at Fairfax House, York: a video http://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/news/at-a-glance/main-section/video_autumn_fashions_as_worn_by_jane_austen_1_3702171
also see this video of inside this lovely Georgian Townhouse: http://www.fairfaxhouse.co.uk/?idno=807
In need of a gown of your own? – check out Reproduction Fabrics: http://www.reproductionfabrics.com/ – and the accompanying textile blog: http://www.cottonopia.net/
Shopping
Head over to esty for a copy of this illustration of the Pride and Prejudice cast of characters: http://www.etsy.com/listing/80386089/pride-and-prejudice-jane-austen
there are others – from Emma, Persuasion, Northanger Abbey, and Sense and Sensibility:
For Fun
I know this is a few years old, but one cannot watch it too often – a fine reminder of how often the men in Austen, etc. were dripping wet!
It’s Raining Men!: on youtube http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=it%27s+raining+men+jane+austen&aq=f
[image: bluechipmag.com]
Enjoy!