It is a truth universally acknowledged that Jane Austen (1775-1817) is a keenly satiric writer whose work, deeply rooted in her time, resonates in ours. In this research-enriched course, we will read Austen’s six novels in their order of publication:  Sense and Sensibility (1811), Pride and Prejudice (1813), Mansfield Park (1814), Emma (1816), Persuasion (1818), and Northanger Abbey (1818).  Through virtual excursions and close reading, we will enter Regency ballrooms, country estates, and genteel parlors as we examine Austen’s voice as a writer and pressing issues that she actively critiqued, such as the economics of marriage, social class stratification, primogeniture, entailment, and slavery. To situate Austen in her historical moment, students will write four of six briefs (short papers on each Austen novel). Working in the IdeaLab, Students will also complete a case for a virtual exhibition on material culture in the novels of Jane Austen; the virtual exhibition will be displayed on the Collaborative Organization for Virtual Education (COVE).  The course will culminate in a 10-12-page research paper on two or three Austen novels. Students should be prepared to read deeply, craft critically (for the IdeaLab component), participate actively, research deeply, and write analytically.

We will ground the novels of Jane Austen in her Regency world by practicing critical crafting and creating a gallery of our material objects on the Collaborative Organization for Virtual Education (COVE). Our two galleries will be on material objects of the Regency age--letter writing and silhouettes.  Letters play a key role in most of Austen’s novels, but particularly in Pride and Prejudice and Persuasion. Using antique and reproduction pens from my personal collection and materials from the IdeaLab, students will use dip pens to write with ink, practice cross-writing (a cost saving measure where one turns a letter 90 degrees and writes over it), fold a letter (rather than use an envelope), and affix a wax seal. Like letters, portrait miniatures were popular Regency tokens of affection for Jane Austen’s family and her characters, who cherish, display, flaunt, and envy these items. Using materials in the IdeaLab, we will craft a portrait miniature/silhouette, which features prominently in Sense and Sensibility and Persuasion. To transform these tokens of affection into lasting mementos of our study of Jane Austen, we will turn to COVE. We will create two gallery exhibits—one on letter writing and another on portrait miniatures/silhouettes. Each student will design a virtual “case” for one of these two galleries.

 

Timelines, Galleries, and Maps


Austen's Ancestry: Silhouettes and Issues of Gender in Regency England | Gallery Image

more
Posted by Catherine Golden on

Jane Austen's Regency World | Map

As we read the novels of Jane Austen, make note of what locations we travel to over the course of her oeuvre. Let's add them to this map to discern how some characters rarely leave their homes while others see far-off parts of the world. In addition, you can add places where film adaptations of the Austen novels took place, connecting Austen's time to our own time. 

Posted by Catherine Golden on

The Regency Handwritten Letter--Recreations from Austen's Novels and Her Life | Gallery Exhibit

more
Posted by Catherine Golden on

The Regency Silhouette--Recreations from Austen's Time to Our Time | Gallery Exhibit

more
Posted by Catherine Golden on

Group posts by user


Group posts by type





Group visibility
Public - accessible to all site users

Group register
Show on registration page