Jane Austen, Biography
Jane
Austen (1775-1817),
English author wrote numerous influential works contributing to the Western
literary canon including Pride and Prejudice (1813) which starts;
“It is a
truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good
fortune must be in want of a wife. However little known the feelings or views
of such a man may be on his first entering a neighbourhood, this truth is so
well fixed in the minds of the surrounding families, that he is considered as
the rightful property of some one or other of their daughters.” —Chapter 1
Austen had rejected suitor
Harris Bigg Wither at the last minute and never ended up marrying, but still
she expresses a keen grasp of the traditional female role and the ensuing hopes
and heartbreaks with her memorable protagonists including Emma Woodhouse, Fanny
Price, Catherine Morland, Anne Elliot, and Elizabeth Bennett of Pride and
Prejudice. Writing in the romantic vein, Austen was also a realist and has
been lauded for her form and structure of plot and intensely detailed
characters who struggle with the issues of class-consciousness versus
individualism: self-respecting men were supposed to become lawyers or join the
church or military, and respectable women married to improve their station in
life.
Jane had started writing at
an early age and her family were highly supportive, though as was done at the
time her works were published anonymously. Her combination of irony, humour,
and sophisticated observations of the societal and cultural machinations
between the classes epitomise the often absurd problems of inheritance, courtship,
morals, and marriage in Regency England. Modestly successful during her life,
her works have gone on to inspire adaptations to the stage and film and have
endured the test of time even into the 21st century.
Born on 16 December, 1775
Jane Austen was the daughter of Cassandra (née Leigh) (1739–1827) and
the reverend George Austen (1731–1805). The Austens were a very close-knit
family; Jane had six brothers and one sister, Cassandra, who would later draw a
famous portrait of Jane. They lived in the village of Steventon in Hampshire
county, England, where George was rector. Young Jane was tutored at home and
attended the Abbey School in Reading, Berkshire.
Jane was inseparable from her older sister Cassandra. They sang and
danced and attended balls together. When George retired around 1801, he moved
his family to Bath where he died in 1805. Adjusting to the ensuing financial
difficulties, Jane, Cassandra and their mother then moved to Southampton for a
time before settling in a cottage on the estate of Edward Austen in the village
of Chawton, Hampshire in 1809, which is now a museum. Austen had missed
Steventon life and now returning to the Hampshire countryside she wrote in
earnest, revising and writing new works including Sense and Sensibility
(1811), Pride and Prejudice (1813), Mansfield Park (1814), and Emma
(1815).
Possibly suffering from Addington’s disease, Jane Austen died on 18
July, 1817. She lies buried in the north aisle of the nave in Winchester
Cathedral in Winchester, England.
In the Memory of
Jane Austen
youngest daughter of the Late
Rev.d George Austen
formerly rector of Steventon in this County
She departed this Life on the 18th of July, 1817,
Aged 41, after a long illness supported with
the patience and the hopes of a Christian
Posthumous publications were Persuasion (1817) and Northanger
Abbey, a satirisation of Ann Radcliffe’s Gothic
novels like The Mysteries of Udolpho (1794). Although Austen had many
critics, among them Charlotte Bronte, Mark Twain and
Lionel Trilling, she also had many admirers during her life and since,
including the Prince Regent, Andrew Lang, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Virginia Woolf, and Sir Walter Scott who
wrote;
“That
young lady has a talent for describing the involvements of feelings and
characters of ordinary life which is to me the most wonderful I ever met with.”
Biography
written by C.D. Merriman for Jalic Inc. Copyright Jalic Inc. 2006. All Rights
Reserved.
http://www.online-literature.com/austen/
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