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Jane Austen’s biography
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Jane Austen’S Biography

May 12, 2015

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Jane Austen's biography

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Page 1: Jane Austen’S Biography

Jane Austen’s biography

Page 2: Jane Austen’S Biography

She is one of the most widely read

and best-loved writer

in British literature.

Page 3: Jane Austen’S Biography
Page 4: Jane Austen’S Biography

Jane Austen was born on December

16, 1775, in the small village of

Steventon in Hampshire, England.

Page 5: Jane Austen’S Biography

Her childhood was happy:

her home was full of books,

and many friends and relatives.

Page 6: Jane Austen’S Biography

Her parents encouraged both their

children’s intellectual interests...

Page 7: Jane Austen’S Biography

... and passion

for producing and performing

in amateur theatricals.

Page 8: Jane Austen’S Biography

Austen’s closest relationship was

with her only sister,

Cassandra.

Page 9: Jane Austen’S Biography

Jane Austen – watercolour produced by her sister, Cassandra

Page 10: Jane Austen’S Biography

From about twelve years old, Jane

began writing spirited parodies of the

popular Gothic...

Page 11: Jane Austen’S Biography

... and sentimental fiction

for the amusement of her family.

Page 12: Jane Austen’S Biography

These early works reveal in nascent

form many of her literary gifts:

Page 13: Jane Austen’S Biography

... particularly her ironic sensibility,

wit, and gift for comedy.

Page 14: Jane Austen’S Biography

Serious works began around 1794:

Lady Susan,

Elinor and Marianne

and First Impressions.

Page 15: Jane Austen’S Biography

In 1797, First Impressions (Pride and

Prejudice) was offered to a publisher

by Jane Austen’s father...

Page 16: Jane Austen’S Biography

... but the publisher

declined to even

look at the manuscript.

Page 17: Jane Austen’S Biography

After her father’s death, Jane,

Cassandra and her mother became

dependent on support from the

Austen brothers.

Page 18: Jane Austen’S Biography

In 1808, they moved to a cottage in Chawton, which is today a museum.

Page 19: Jane Austen’S Biography

Jane Austen revised her earlier works

which were entitled:

Sense and Sensibility (1811) and

Pride and Prejudice (1813).

Page 20: Jane Austen’S Biography

She also wrote

Mansfield Park (1814)

and Emma (1815).

Page 21: Jane Austen’S Biography

In 1816, Jane Austen’s health

began to fail.

She died at the age of 41

on July 18, 1817.

Page 22: Jane Austen’S Biography

She loved balls, music, country walks,

conversation, children, novels.

Page 23: Jane Austen’S Biography

Her works were concerned with

courtship, love and marriage

but she never married.

Page 24: Jane Austen’S Biography
Page 25: Jane Austen’S Biography

All Jane Austen’s work lifetime

appeared in print anonymously.

Page 26: Jane Austen’S Biography

Just few months following her death a

biographical notice appeared in the

books revealing her name.

Page 27: Jane Austen’S Biography

She lived in privacy and, after her

death, her family censored and

destroyed many of her letters.

Page 28: Jane Austen’S Biography

On her grave

there was no mention of

her writings...

Page 29: Jane Austen’S Biography

... just an allusion to

“the extraordinary endowments

of her mind.”

Page 30: Jane Austen’S Biography

She represented

the ordinary world

of men and women

as it was...

Page 31: Jane Austen’S Biography

... a place where love

and romance were constrained

by economics and human

imperfection...

Page 32: Jane Austen’S Biography

... a place where characters were

never simply good or evil but more

complicated amalgams, reflecting both

their own moral nature...

Page 33: Jane Austen’S Biography

... and the virtues

and failings of the families and society

that shaped them.

Page 34: Jane Austen’S Biography

Because Jane Austen is still in tune

with today’s sensibilities,

her novels have been adapted to

many movies...

Page 35: Jane Austen’S Biography

The more recent are...

Page 36: Jane Austen’S Biography

(1995)

Page 37: Jane Austen’S Biography

(1996)

Page 38: Jane Austen’S Biography

(1999)

Page 39: Jane Austen’S Biography

(2005)

Page 40: Jane Austen’S Biography

(2007) (tv)

Page 41: Jane Austen’S Biography

(2007) (tv)

Page 42: Jane Austen’S Biography

(2007)

Page 43: Jane Austen’S Biography

And others had

Jane Austen’s novel

like background...

Page 44: Jane Austen’S Biography

(1998)

Paraphrasing Pride and Prejudice...

Page 45: Jane Austen’S Biography

(2006)

Paraphrasing Persuasion...

Page 46: Jane Austen’S Biography

(2007)

... paraphrasing five of her novels.

... And...

Page 47: Jane Austen’S Biography

Jane Austen’s works are full of

intelligence and precisely crafted to

convey its often subtle meaning.

Page 48: Jane Austen’S Biography

. . .

Page 49: Jane Austen’S Biography

Sources

http://www.pemberley.com/janeinfo/janelife.html

http://www.jane-austens-house-museum.org.uk/

Page 50: Jane Austen’S Biography

19th Century English Literature