Last news about Jane Austen :
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Penguin Readers Forum: Recent Posts - PeopleRank: 1 - April 7, 2010
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Jane Austen's Bath or perhaps
Agatha Christie's Devon. Alternatively we can research and organise a tour for you to visit locations specific to your own favourite. All tours are individually designed to suit our customers' exact requirements at a surprisingly...
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Stage: Comedy | guardian.co.uk - PeopleRank: 4 - April 5, 2010
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Jane Austen on TV, sticking a black or Asian face in there might be odd. But I find it strange in radio drama. I'd like to think I'd be in with a shot at playing Mr Darcy on the radio – but when I do get offered a radio part, it's always for an Asian...
Cited people :
Paul McCartney
Hugh Jackman
Woody Allen
Richard Briers
Joe Penhall
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Money: Work & careers | guardian.co.uk - PeopleRank: 9 - April 2, 2010
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Jane Austen for three years: they now outnumber men in potentially lucrative subjects such as law and medicine.
Any number of reasons could account for this difference (and there are plenty of interesting and under-discussed reasons why men may not be...
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Business: Europe | guardian.co.uk - PeopleRank: 5 - April 2, 2010
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Jane Austen – was introduced in 2005.
Kleisterlee, an imposing business-like presence with ice-blue eyes, has much invested in making a success of the company. Not only did he join straight from national service, but his father had spent his entire...
Cited people :
David Teather
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Writers and Artists - PeopleRank: 3 - April 2, 2010
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Jane Austen’s first work was self-published, and her investment in the process was considerable – the cost of publication was more than a third of her household’s annual income.
It was revealed recently that in the US last year more titles were...
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Liam Byrn.es - PeopleRank: 1 - April 1, 2010
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Jane Austen’s will? Yes!
Description: Photograph taken to demonstrate some of the worst housing conditions in British Antigua. The island was in the process of carrying out slum clearance. The file reads “I believe I am correct in stating that, nowhere...
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The Independent - News RSS Feed - PeopleRank: 21 - March 28, 2010
Jane Austen for the screen saved her "from going under", as her marriage to her first husband and fellow thespian
Kenneth Branagh disintegrated...
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Emma Thompson
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Basingstoke Gazette | Reports - PeopleRank: 0 - March 16, 2010
Jane Austen’s time, an even earlier riding suit, children’s clothes, smocks, the Elizabethan Basing embroidery, sewing patterns, innumerable shoes and hats – some collection for Alison
Carter to care for...
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What's happening around Lyme Bay - Lyme Bay... - PeopleRank: 1 - February 23, 2010
Jane Austen was a frequent visitor to Lyme Regis, first arriving in 1803 when she was 29. She stayed in a seafront cottage (still in existence) where she wrote Persuasion, setting part of the novel in the town. Austen fans can see and climb the steep...
Cited people :
Beatrix Potter
Meryl Streep
Jeremy Irons
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Arukiyomi - PeopleRank: 5 - February 20, 2010
Context: finished this on my way down to Tesco’s to get myself some shopping.
REVIEW
Yet another Austen and, as I suspected, they’re starting to take on much of a muchness now. Catherine, the heroine of choice this time, is about the most naive and...
Jane Austen biography - Wikipedia
Jane Austen (16 December 1775 – 18 July 1817) was an English novelist whose realism, biting social commentary and masterful use of free indirect speech, burlesque, and irony have earned her a place as one of the most widely read and most beloved writers in English literature.
Austen lived her entire life as part of a small and close-knit family located on the lower fringes of English gentry. She was educated primarily by her father and older brothers as well as through her own reading. The steadfast support of her family was critical to Austen's development as a professional writer. Austen's artistic apprenticeship lasted from her teenage years until she was about thirty-five years old. During this period, she experimented with various literary forms, including the epistolary novel which she tried and then abandoned, and wrote and extensively revised three major novels and began a fourth.
From 1811 until 1816, with the release of Sense and Sensibility (1811), Pride and Prejudice (1813), Mansfield Park (1814) and Emma (1816), she achieved success as a published writer. She wrote two additional novels, Northanger Abbey and Persuasion, both published posthumously in 1818, and began a third, which was eventually titled Sanditon, but died before completing it.
Austen's works critique the novels of sensibility of the second half of the eighteenth century and are part of the transition to nineteenth-century realism. Austen's plots, though fundamentally comic, highlight the dependence of women on marriage to secure social standing and economic security. Like those of Samuel Johnson, one of the strongest influences on her writing, her works are concerned with moral issues.
During Austen's lifetime, because she chose to publish anonymously, her works brought her little personal fame and only a few positive reviews. Through the mid-nineteenth century, her novels were admired only by members of the literary elite. However, the publication of her nephew's A Memoir of Jane Austen in 1869 introduced her to a wider public as an appealing personality and kindled popular interest in her works. By the 1940s, Austen was widely accepted in academia as a "great English writer". The second half of the twentieth century saw a proliferation of Austen scholarship, which explored many aspects of her novels: artistic, ideological, and historical. In popular culture, a Janeite fan culture has developed, centred on Austen's life, her works, and the various film and television adaptations of them.