Seminars meet each weekday morning, with afternoons free for course-related field trips, individual study, or exploring the many places of interest in and around the city.
Monday
Introduction and historical/literary backgrounds; the disreputable eighteenth-century novel and contemporary concerns about impressionable novel readers. Jane Austen’s life and the pioneering women writers who influenced her and informed her writing. The courtship novel and the gothic novel; discussion of Northanger Abbey, Austen’s earliest novel, originally called ‘Susan’, as coming-of-age narrative and a clever, complicated, multi-layered parody of these genres of fiction.
Tuesday
An introduction to the eighteenth-century ‘cult’ of sensibility, assessing the differences between Neoclassical and Romantic world views. Discussion of Sense and Sensibility in its historical and cultural context of post-French-Revolutionary anxieties; examining the novel as Austen’s first piece of published writing. Themes for discussion include the sexual double standard, female social and economic vulnerability.
Wednesday
Discussion of Pride and Prejudice as a courtship novel, a social satire, and a narrative of female self-development; examining themes including female education versus accomplishments, faulty parenting, unequal inheritance laws, and the sexual double standard. Do the many film adaptations of this book testify to the universality of Austen’s art or betray it with the addition of romantic elements that do not appear in the novel itself? Comparison of Elizabeth Bennet, Austen’s most popular heroine with the eponymous heroine of Emma, whom Austen described as one “whom no-one but myself will much like”.
Thursday
Field trip to Chawton, Hampshire: home to the Jane Austen House Museum and the Early Women’s Writing Centre at Chawton House.
Friday
Discussion of Persuasion, Austen’s final, posthumously published novel; to assess how her writing technique developed from her earlier, more satirical novels. Looking at themes also treated in Mansfield Park, such as the navy versus landed gentry, primogeniture and inheritance, female friendship and sibling rivalry, familial duty versus personal integrity.
Field Trip
Destination: Chawton village, Hampshire: The Jane Austen House Museum, and Chawton House.
Website:
janeaustens.house
chawtonhouse.org
Duration: All day
Excursion Rating: Moderate - up to two hours' walk on even ground or up to an hour's walk on rough and/or steep ground or up lots of stairs and steps.