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28 Locating Austen in Contemporary Theatre
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Illustrations viii
- Acknowledgements xiv
- Note on Texts xv
- Jane Austen and the Arts Introduction 1
-
Part I The Arts in Context
- 1 Jane Austen, Early Modern Aesthetics and Contemplative Sublimity 15
- 2 Taste and Passion, Disinterest and the Imagination 34
- 3 Jane Austen, Moral Philosophy and the Tradition 47
- 4 ‘Possessing a most exquisite taste in every species of literature’: Reading, Moral Taste and Creative Action in Jane Austen’s Novels 61
- 5 Reforming the Artist Heroine: Reading Sense and Sensibility (1811) as a Response to Jane West’s A Gossip’s Story (1796) 76
- 6 Picturing (In)Sensibility in Austen’s Novels and Print Culture 92
- 7 The Flemish Jane Austen 108
-
Part II The Arts in Austen
- 8 ‘The Creative Eye of Fancy’: Women, Visual Culture and the Female Gaze in Austen’s Novels 129
- 9 Shadow Portraits: Jane Austen, Lady Susan and Silhouettes 142
- 10 Jane Austen and Crafts 159
- 11 Jane Austen’s Conversation Pieces 174
- 12 Jane Austen, Caricature and the Fat Self 191
- 13 Jane Austen and the Figure of the Body 205
- 14 ‘He has great pleasure in seeing the performances of other people’: Austen’s Men and the Arts 218
- 15 Music in Jane Austen’s Novels 232
- 16 Jane Austen’s Dance Dialogues: Representing Dance in the Novels 247
- 17 The Paper Age: Jane Austen, Fashion and Finance 261
- 18 Jane Austen and the Theatre of Her Time 276
- 19 Jane Austen, Architecture and the Decorative Arts 291
- 20 Creators of Spaces: The Art of Owning, Inhabiting and Imagining Property in Jane Austen 307
- 21 ‘Nothing but pleasure from beginning to end’: Austen’s Gardens 321
-
Part III Afterlives
- 22 Jane Austen and the Letter 337
- 23 Austen in a Competitive Literary Marketplace: Nineteenth-Century Illustrated Editions 351
- 24 Jane Austen and the Imperfect Art of Translation 372
- 25 Dealing with Jane Austen’s Unfinished Novels: Completions of The Watsons and Sanditon 389
- 26 The Perils of Novelistic Adaptation: Death Comes to Pemberley, Longbourn and Pamela 403
- 27 When the Pen is in Fans’ Hands – The Jane Austen Fan Fiction Phenomenon 417
- 28 Locating Austen in Contemporary Theatre 435
- 29 ‘I am having a bit of a strange postmodern moment here’: Adapting Austen for Television 451
- 30 Theme Parks and Seaside Resorts: Rethinking Material and Visual Culture in Sanditon (2019) and Austenland (2013) 465
- 31 ‘Three or four families in a RPG’: Gaming and Jane Austen 477
- 32 Austen Reloaded: Digital Approaches to Jane Austen and the Arts 491
- 33 The Jane Austen Heritage Industry and Literary Tourism 513
- Notes on Contributors 527
- Index 534
- Plate 545
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Illustrations viii
- Acknowledgements xiv
- Note on Texts xv
- Jane Austen and the Arts Introduction 1
-
Part I The Arts in Context
- 1 Jane Austen, Early Modern Aesthetics and Contemplative Sublimity 15
- 2 Taste and Passion, Disinterest and the Imagination 34
- 3 Jane Austen, Moral Philosophy and the Tradition 47
- 4 ‘Possessing a most exquisite taste in every species of literature’: Reading, Moral Taste and Creative Action in Jane Austen’s Novels 61
- 5 Reforming the Artist Heroine: Reading Sense and Sensibility (1811) as a Response to Jane West’s A Gossip’s Story (1796) 76
- 6 Picturing (In)Sensibility in Austen’s Novels and Print Culture 92
- 7 The Flemish Jane Austen 108
-
Part II The Arts in Austen
- 8 ‘The Creative Eye of Fancy’: Women, Visual Culture and the Female Gaze in Austen’s Novels 129
- 9 Shadow Portraits: Jane Austen, Lady Susan and Silhouettes 142
- 10 Jane Austen and Crafts 159
- 11 Jane Austen’s Conversation Pieces 174
- 12 Jane Austen, Caricature and the Fat Self 191
- 13 Jane Austen and the Figure of the Body 205
- 14 ‘He has great pleasure in seeing the performances of other people’: Austen’s Men and the Arts 218
- 15 Music in Jane Austen’s Novels 232
- 16 Jane Austen’s Dance Dialogues: Representing Dance in the Novels 247
- 17 The Paper Age: Jane Austen, Fashion and Finance 261
- 18 Jane Austen and the Theatre of Her Time 276
- 19 Jane Austen, Architecture and the Decorative Arts 291
- 20 Creators of Spaces: The Art of Owning, Inhabiting and Imagining Property in Jane Austen 307
- 21 ‘Nothing but pleasure from beginning to end’: Austen’s Gardens 321
-
Part III Afterlives
- 22 Jane Austen and the Letter 337
- 23 Austen in a Competitive Literary Marketplace: Nineteenth-Century Illustrated Editions 351
- 24 Jane Austen and the Imperfect Art of Translation 372
- 25 Dealing with Jane Austen’s Unfinished Novels: Completions of The Watsons and Sanditon 389
- 26 The Perils of Novelistic Adaptation: Death Comes to Pemberley, Longbourn and Pamela 403
- 27 When the Pen is in Fans’ Hands – The Jane Austen Fan Fiction Phenomenon 417
- 28 Locating Austen in Contemporary Theatre 435
- 29 ‘I am having a bit of a strange postmodern moment here’: Adapting Austen for Television 451
- 30 Theme Parks and Seaside Resorts: Rethinking Material and Visual Culture in Sanditon (2019) and Austenland (2013) 465
- 31 ‘Three or four families in a RPG’: Gaming and Jane Austen 477
- 32 Austen Reloaded: Digital Approaches to Jane Austen and the Arts 491
- 33 The Jane Austen Heritage Industry and Literary Tourism 513
- Notes on Contributors 527
- Index 534
- Plate 545