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Austen

Feb. 4th, 2005 09:43 am
poliphilo: (Default)
[personal profile] poliphilo
I'm re-reading Pride and Prejudice. It's been a long long time. And my perceptions had become terribly distorted.

Austen is deceptive. She'll write these seemingly naive sentences and you'll think how charming, how quaint, how just like Daisy Ashford and then right at the end there'll be a little flick, like the stab of a scorpion's tail. One of the things the dramatizations tend to miss is that these people of hers are all young and inexperienced- even Darcy. His aloofness is less to do with him being Lord Byron and more because he's awkward and earnest and unsure of himself.

I'd like to see P & P done with really young actors. Kids in their late teens and early 20s. I know the characters are supposed to be older than that, but I
think the rules of early 19th century polite society were designed to delay maturity, so that a 28 year old woman or man in Austenland is no smarter than an 18 year old now.

I love the purity of her style. Short sentences, plain words. An 18th century
style- and vastly preferable to that of any English fiction writer for the next 100 years or more.

Date: 2005-02-04 06:55 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] poliphilo.livejournal.com
Austen had a deep understanding of human psychology. The lightness is deceptive.

And she could do things that Bronte and Dickens couldn't.

Hey, we need them all!

Date: 2005-02-04 09:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] halfmoon-mollie.livejournal.com
Here's an interesting quote I found on Jane Austen:

Charlotte Brontë and E.B. Browning found her limited, and Elizabeth Hardwick said: "I don't think her superb intelligence brought her happiness."</>

I had something brilliant to say, but I lost it in a fit of coughing.

So many young women today dismiss Austen as "Chick Lit". One hopes their perception will change as they get older.

If they bother to read the book.

Date: 2005-02-04 10:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] poliphilo.livejournal.com
Limited? I can see why the women writers who followed shortly after her might have thought so. They were battling hard to extend the range of women's fiction and gain respect equal to that of their male counterparts. but I believe it's a superficial judgement. She may not have had a very wide experience of society, but her knowledge of human nature was profound.

Date: 2005-02-05 02:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ibid.livejournal.com
Indeed and she was very wise for not going into what she did not know. And there is a good deal of drama in daily life, which Woolf took to an extreme in her novels.

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