“It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife.”
What has changed since 1813, the year Jane Austen’s most famous novel ‘Pride and Prejudice’ was first published? Maybe not as much as we would like to think! Especially for women, who, in my opinion, remain one of the most underprivileged people worldwide, albeit with some and sometimes significant differences depending on the country and the society they live in. This is despite Mao Zedong’s famous proclamation that “Women Hold Up Half The Sky”.
When you dig under the surface of our ‘evolved’,
modern and technological world, we (disturbingly!) still find much in common
with the early 19th century society described by my beloved Jane.
I’m a great fan of Austen and have
read every word she has ever written plus much that has been written about her.
She is the centre of my literary universe. Never having wandered far from the
small area in the south of England where she spent her 41 years of life
(between Steventon, Bath, Southampton, Chawton and Winchester), her works have
reached across the globe and across the ages in a way so extraordinary that it
could never have been predicted or foreseen by the ever-humble Jane.
“The little bit (two Inches wide) of Ivory, on
which I work with so fine a Brush, as produces little effect after much
labour.” is how she once described her work to her
nephew Edward with typical modesty.
Having refused an offer of marriage, this most influential of all female writers has lived a quiet, simple life. Supported by her dear sister Cassandra, she has devoted her time to writing. From the tiny corner of her small world and limited life experience, she has simply observed. Like a forensic scientist Jane has applied herself to describing the rules of society, the nature of human relations and the dramas of love and other passions. The intensity of her emotions always inversely proportional to the restraint of her prose. Austen’s reflections are harsh and reveal her to be a realist, yet the message is made digestible by a wit and irony that make us laugh at what we recognize to be our and our society’s cardinal sins. The style of her writing makes her both cynical and compassionate at once.
“He was not an ill-disposed young man, unless to be rather cold hearted, and rather selfish, is to be ill-disposed” – is said about Mr John Dashwood in ‘Sense and Sensibility’.
She points out the everlasting truths that money
rules, most men and women are hypocrites, social class is a prison that’s hard
to break out of, but perhaps needed to give us all an illusion of order.
Her characters come alive with their unforgettable
and often humorous personal weaknesses, foibles and vanities, sometimes with
their noble virtues and strengths.
She reveals the unquestionable fact that love
remains a mystery so great and so powerful as to blossom even in the most
unfavourable circumstances and in defiance of all attempts at control by social
mores and rules.
Jane Austen’s message is essential, it transcends the boundaries of
culture and time and is therefore, by definition, true Art. It clearly tells us
that a woman’s mind, ability and vocation should always be nurtured and encouraged and never ever be denied.
Main works by Jane Austen:
‘Sense and Sensibility’
‘Pride and Prejudice’
‘Mansfield Park’
‘Emma’
‘Northanger Abbey’
‘Persuasion’
‘Lady Susan’
‘The Watsons’ (unfinished)
‘Sanditon’ (unfinished)
#JaneAusten #Art #PrideandPrejudice #SenseandSensibility #MansfieldPark #Emma #Persuasion
Jane Austen was born on the 16th of December 1775. Today would have been her 246th birthday!
No comments:
Post a Comment