Originally posted by agingjb
View Post
Jane Austen's Heroines
Collapse
X
-
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
-
-
Originally posted by agingjb View PostJane Austen wrote in a letter: "I am going to take a heroine whom no one but myself will much like."
and she is talking about Emma Woodhouse, not Fanny Price. Irony?
I think Trilling, in vinteuil’s very illuminating quotation, is right in implying that the basic ‘problem’ with Fanny Price that she is so unmodern We like to think of Lizzy Bennet, the Dashwood sisters, Emma Woodhouse and even Anne Elliot (perhaps simplistically) as somehow one of us, but that’s impossible with Fanny. We have to make much more of an imaginative leap to get inside the character, let alone sympathise with her.
Comment
-
-
As for Fanny, Jane is reported as saying (in JEA-L's Memoir) re the newly written Mansfield Park that her brother (Rev) Henry Austen: "gives great praise to the drawing of the characters. He understands them all, likes Fanny ..."
The Rev Sydney Smith enjoyed Miss Austen's novels and 'Fanny Price was one of his prime favourites.'
On Emma, JEA-L reports in full JA's letter to a friend: ' "I trust you will be as glad to see my Emma as I shall be to see your Jemima [her friend's newly born daughter]." She was very fond of Emma, but did not reckon her being a general favourite; for when commencing that work, she said, 'I am going to take a heroine whom no one but myself will much like.'
JEA-L does not take the comment as being merely mischievous, apparently.
Perhaps you have to be a clergyman to appreciate FannyIt isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by aeolium View Post
[Didn't the philosopher J L Austin perversely call one of his books Sense and Sensibilia?]
"Words aren't always mere words : a few inaudible articulations may fetter two people together for life."
- which would be a classic exemplum of a 'performative utterance'!
Last edited by vinteuil; 06-03-13, 16:12.
Comment
-
-
"Pride and Prejudice celebrates the traits of spiritedness, vivacity, celerity, and lightness, and associates them with happiness and virtue."
Edit: I had absent-mindedly written the name of Willoughby instead of Frank Churchill, though thinking about it the Marianne/Willoughby relationship is not that far removed from the Emma/Frank Churchill one except in the more passionate and unrestrained character of Marianne, but Emma could have committed her affections to FC in the way that Marianne did to W (and Knightley feared that that was exactly what had happened).Last edited by aeolium; 07-03-13, 09:59.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by aeolium View PostIs that really true of P&P?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by JFLL View PostMaybe a bit mischievous, too (if defensive). Her remark about Emma sounds rather in the vein of what Brahms wrote (with heavier tread) to his publisher about his 2nd symphony: ‘[It] is so melancholy that you will not be able to bear it. I have never written anything so sad, and the score must come out in mourning.’
I think Trilling, in vinteuil’s very illuminating quotation, is right in implying that the basic ‘problem’ with Fanny Price that she is so unmodern We like to think of Lizzy Bennet, the Dashwood sisters, Emma Woodhouse and even Anne Elliot (perhaps simplistically) as somehow one of us, but that’s impossible with Fanny. We have to make much more of an imaginative leap to get inside the character, let alone sympathise with her.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostFanny is so passively resigned to her lot in life and uncomplaining that she becomes unrecognizeable as belonging to Homo Sapien Sapiens.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by french frank View PostAmusing though it is on the surface, I always regarded it as the narrowly averted tragedy with the two of them nearly ruining their lives through their faults.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostFanny is so passively resigned to her lot in life and uncomplaining that she becomes unrecognizeable as belonging to Homo Sapien Sapiens.
Comment
-
-
Reading this thread makes me think of the influences on JA in conceiving her heroines. Read Maria Edgeworth of an earlier period and her Helen and Belinda for example. There are interesting prototypes to be found here and elsewhere in Edgeworth.
Quite agree about the comments about P&P, the two protagonists almost coming to grief as a result of their faults! I wonder if there was a real life example that JA had come across?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Gordon View PostReading this thread makes me think of the influences on JA in conceiving her heroines.
Comment
-
-
Mansfield Park
I found it considerably easier going than rf reported it, and got up early this morning to polish off the last two chapters. As for ‘Jane Austen’s heroines’, the subject is an interesting general one, but especially in relation to MP and Fanny Price.
It’s hard to persuade anyone to like someone they dislike, but in the case of a fictional character there are clues to be followed. If a heroine is ‘disliked’ by readers when self-evidently she is being presented by the author as both liked and admired by other characters and clearly is intended to be admired, is it the author who has failed or the readers?
I’m unequivocally ‘for’ Fanny Price and am interested to know why, precisely (with close reference to the text, of course ) others feel differently.Last edited by french frank; 13-03-13, 17:12.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by french frank View PostMansfield Park
I found it considerably easier going than rf reported it, and got up early this morning to polish off the last two chapters. As for ‘Jane Austen’s heroines’, the subject is an interesting general one, but especially in relation to MP and Fanny Price.
It’s hard to persuade anyone to like someone they dislike, but in the case of a fictional character there are clues to be followed. If a heroine is ‘disliked’ by readers when self-evidently she is being presented by the author as both liked and admired by other characters and clearly is intended to be admired, is it the author who has failed or the readers?
I’m unequivocally ‘for’ Fanny Price and am interested to know why, precisely (with close reference to the text, of course ) others feel differently.
I don't know the answers to the questions you pose. Recently my wife and I viewed a production of The Old Curiousity Shop. I am more of a Dickens devotee than Jane Austen. the production reminded me how much I disliked the character of Little Nell, whose undeniable sweetness and goodness and lack of self interest just seems beyond plausability. Fanny Price
shares some of Nell's traits. I guess I have more sympathy with characters who have to struggle to overcome their own faults, and who become wiser for the struggle, such as Emma.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostI guess I have more sympathy with characters who have to struggle to overcome their own faults, and who become wiser for the struggle, such as Emma.
Comment
-
Comment