A SECULAR AND NARROW WORLD: Hers and Ours?
My mother-in-law, a woman in her late eighties, finds watching movies adapted from Jane Austen’s novels boring. Her attitude mirrors, somewhat, the reaction of novelist Henry James who saw the characters in Austen’s novels as having “small and second-rate minds,” Philistines one and all. Emerson found Austen to be imprisoned in a wretched and smothering conventionality with an excessive concern for “marriageableness.”1 Not everyone has reacted this way to Austen, not now nor in the nearly two centuries since her death in 1817. Some saw her writing as “a prose Shakespeare,”2 a writer who exposed with her acid solution of words the empty foundations of social and personal morality in a violent and repressive age in English society.-Ron Price with thanks to 1Lee Siegel, “A Writer Who Is Good For You,” The Atlantic Online, January 1998; and 2William MacAuley in Jane Austen: The Critical Heritage, Vol. 2, B.C. Southam, editor, Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd., London, 1987.
There is nothing to equal
your smallness in a small
town and the commonplace
has never found a finer master
than your divine chatter some
have said, Jane, yes they have.
Petty inconsistencies, parochial
vanities, familiar everydayisms,
vulgarity and pride, delineated
as entertainment and amusement,
tissues of character in speech,
gently undulating life-surface,
triviality but intense relations,
satire’s world without bitterness,
hermetically sealed with supreme
moments quite inarticulate giving
you: coolness, patience, poise and
leisure obtained so you could write
and me too, Jane!----and me too!
Your wholly secular and narrow
world with people you disliked,
tolerated but accepted in the only
society you knew where nothing
was too little for your little world
and happiness=simple pleasures.1
Balance, moderation, courtesy:
recipe for survival in two worlds—
yours and ours—inner landscapes—
the triumph of the ordinarily ordinary
and the inherited order over change:2
but we can’t triumph with that recipe
and order can we Jane? Can we Jane?
Nor could you---would you, Jane?3
1 Jane Austen: A Collection of Critical Essays, editor, Ian Watt, Prentice-Hall Inc., Inglewood Cliffs, N.J., 1963, p. 172.
2 Adena Rosmarin, “Misreading Emma: The Powers and Perfidies of Interpretive History, English Literary History, Vol. 51, pp. 315-42.
3 What would Austen have written if she had lived beyond the age of 41?
Ron Price
4 June 2008
Anne Lister and Jane Austen
The Secret Diaries of Miss Anne Lister is a 2010 British television biographical drama about a 19th century Yorkshire landowner Anne Lister.(1) The Real Anne Lister(2) followed on Australian television. Anne Lister (1791–1840) was a wealthy, unmarried woman who inherited land from her uncle in 1826.
Just for the record and to place Anne Lister and her diaries in some historical perspective, 1826 was the year the second president of the United States, John Adams, died and the year the first photograph was taken. Most people I've known in the last 50 years know little to nothing about John Adams although, for the visually keen there was a wonderful TV series on Adams a few years ago. And also, just for the record, the view of early 19th century England, at least in literature, in fiction writing is seen, for those people who read 19th century literature, through the eyes of Jane Austen and the Bronte sisters. Lister's diaries will enrich and diversify whatever view readers have of those times some two hundred years ago.-Ron Price with thanks to (1) ABC1TV, 13 November 2011, 8:30-10:05 p.m., and (2) ABC1 TV, 12 March 2012, 12;30-1:30 a.m.
Some said the film was sex-obsessed(1)
on those wild-windy Yorkshire moors:
this story of the first modern lesbian, &
part of the fountainhead of queer studies(2)
say some scholars of lesbian sexuality!!
1 The Secret Diaries of Miss Anne Lister
2 Queer studies is the critical theory based study of issues relating to sexual orientation and gender identity usually focusing on lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender(LGBT) people and cultures. Universities have also labelled this area of analysis Sexual Diversity Studies, or Sexualities Studies. Once only meaning odd or unusual, and later an anti-gay epithet, "queer" used in reference to such individuals and communities remains controversial. Originally centred on LGBT history and literary theory, the field has expanded to include the academic study of issues raised in biology, sociology, anthropology, the history of science, philosophy, psychology, political science, ethics, and other fields by an examination of the identity, lives, history, and perception of queer people.
This narrow place of shadows
Good principles, even allied to good sense and affection, may not have good results or produce happiness. Jane Austen knew this.(1) Personal happiness, as 'Abdu'l-Baha points out to us, is the result of character, learning, high resolve, ability to solve difficult problems and nobility of soul. Clearly, happiness is a composite drawing on an inner life and private character. What we do, too, affects what we are and what we become.
Jane Austen's novel Emma which was on the curriculum in the early 1990s when I taught English literature to matriculation students in Western Australia is the story of a gradual and humble self-enlightenment in a life. But a wholly secularized life with no spiritual awareness is a narrow one(2) and the nature of that self-enlightenment limited. The quotidian and provincial, the shallow, narrow life which is "frittered away over little things"(3) misses the mark of life's purpose which is to fill this "narrow place of shadows" with light.(4)-Ron Price with thanks to (2)B.C. Southam, editor, Jane Austen: The Critical Heritage, Vol.2, Routledge and Kegan Paul Ltd., London, 1987, p.110; and (1)W.A. Craik in Persuasion, Jane Austen, Pan Books, London, 1969(1818), p.4; (3)"Misreading Emma: The Powers and perfidies of Interpretive History," Adena Rosmarin, in ELH, Vol.51, 1984, p.316; and (4) 'Abdu'l-Baha, Selections, p.36.
Even someone like you1
looked for means, a way
of achieving unobtrusive
spiritual survival,
a mode of existence
for your critical attitudes
without being didactic,
knowing as you did
the impossibility of being
cut off from objectionable
others and the objectionable
stuff in your own dear self.
You had, as I have come to have,
a strong ambivalence to the group,
knowing as you did the narrowness
of a wholly secularized life.
In some ways your Emma, like my
Pioneering Over Five Epochs,
is a complex study of a life,
existing as it does on a continuum
between self-importance and humility,
egotism and self-effacement,
with beauty and continuity
underlying the trivial and the serious
stream that is our life and lives.
1 Jane Austen
Ron Price
21/8//’-1 to 1/1/’13.