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Eleanor Catton writes screenplay of Jane Austen’s ‘Emma’
Hear Jocelyn in conversation with Jesse Mulligan on Radio New Zealand’s Afternoons show on the topic of Austen adaptations, specifically in relation to the news that Eleanor Catton has written the screenplay of the 2020 Emma film.
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Jane Austen Society of North America AGM: 200 Years of Northanger Abbey
The Jane Austen Society of North America have their AGM in a few days time – Jocelyn Harris will be speaking as the Carol Medine Moss Keynote Speaker, her topic being “Magnificent Miss Morland“. Here is the abstract of her talk: Jocelyn Harris, professor emerita at the University of Otago, New Zealand, is well-known […]
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Afternoon talk at Chawton House, Sunday 13 October
In her latest book on Jane Austen, Professor Jocelyn Harris argues that she was “a satirist, a celebrity watcher, and a keen political observer”. Come along to the “Great House” for an afternoon talk by Professor Harris on Austen. Tickets: £15, Friends and members of the Burney Society: £12. Includes tea/coffee and cake. Talk starts […]
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Fiona Farrell’s call-to-arms at 2018 Auckland Writers Festival
Recently, renowned New Zealand writer Fiona Farrell gave the University of Auckland’s lecture at the 2018 Auckland Writers Festival, speaking on the political in literature, sometimes where we least expect it. You can read her fiery, wide-ranging and compelling lecture here, as well as listen to it via podcast. Farrell mentioned Satire, Celebrity and Politics […]
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Jane Austen, the Prince of Wales, and Mr. Trump
What would Jane Austen say about Donald Trump? Easy to answer, because she had seen it all before. A Regency girl in a golden age of satire, she attacked the Prince of Wales for his much-lampooned appearance, his lewdness, his licentiousness, his instability, his outrageous spending, his fondness for over-the-top building ventures, his implicit treason, […]
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“Behold Me Immortal”: Jane Austen on the Internet (via JASNA 38.1, Winter 2017)
“When once we are buried you think we are dead / But behold me Immortal,” declares St. Swithin—or perhaps Jane Austen herself—in “Venta,” a satiric poem written on July 15, 1817, three days before she died (Minor Works 452). Immortal indeed, for new resources such as databases of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century newspapers and journals, digitized manuscripts, […]
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ASECS 2017: Satire, celebrity, and politics (via Devoney Looser)
Jocelyn Harris: #Austen #satire #celebrity #politics to packed room in talk filled w/revelations & laughter #asecs17 pic.twitter.com/LWZIGmcNmX — Devoney Looser (@devoneylooser) March 31, 2017
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200th anniversary commemorated in the Times Literary Supplement
To commemorate the 200th anniversary of Jane Austen’s death, the Times Literary Supplement asked me, “What does Jane Austen mean to you?” On July 19, 2017, I was delighted to be in the company of––among others––Melvyn Bragg, Paula Byrne, Amit Chaudhuri, Deirdre Le Faye, Claire Harman, Claudia L. Johnson, Devoney Looser, Pat Rogers, Patrica Rozema, […]
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Austen’s satire on hypochondria: via ‘Corpus’
Jane Austen’s final, unfinished, novel Sanditon depicts hypochondria, property speculation, and consumerism. The University of Otago, Medical Humanities blog Corpus recently featured an essay I wrote investigating the satire Austen employs in this work. Between 27 January and 18 March 1817, Jane Austen wrote her final, unfinished, novel Sanditon, meaning a town built upon sand. […]
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Jane Austen’s Regency World