Monday, 28 January 2013

Pride and Prejudice at 200: from Colin Firth groupies to Jane Austen erotica

Obsessive Jane Austen fans or “Janeites” are nothing new. The term “Janeite” was coined in 1894 by George Saintsbury in his preface to a new edition of Pride and Prejudice. In 1924 Rudyard Kipling wrote a short story, “The Janeites”, about First World War soldiers who coped with the horrors of trench warfare by discussing their love of Austen’s novels. Fans of Austen seem, almost uniquely, to feel the need to identify with the heroines, in a way that fans of George Eliot (for example) do not. A symptom of this is the novel The Jane Austen Book Club (2004) by Karen Joy Fowler and its 2007 film adaptation. Five women and one man meet monthly to discuss Austen’s novels. Each of them relates to Austen’s work in different ways; as the narrator sums it up: “It was essential to reintroduce Austen into your life regularly ... let her look around.” 

Pride and Prejudice at 200: take the quiz

It is a truth universally acknowledged that we all like a good literary quiz, so prove you can tell your Bennets from your Bingleys and your de Bourghs from your Darcys with our test of Jane Austen's greatest novel, Pride and Prejudice. 

 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/books-life/9831077/Pride-and-Prejudice-at-200-take-the-quiz.html

Pride and Prejudice: Jane Austen fans celebrate novel's 200th anniversary

It has one of the most famous opening lines in literature, it turned Colin Firth into a heartthrob and it spawned a zombie spin-off. Now Pride and Prejudice has reached the venerable age of 200.
It is a truth universally acknowledged that the bicentenary of Pride and Prejudice will be accompanied by a surge of Jane Austen-related events and merchandise - and articles that shamelessly hijack the novel's first sentence.
Monday's anniversary is being marked by a "readathon" of the novel at the Jane Austen Centre in Bath, which has launched an 11th-hour internet campaign to find an international star to read the first chapter. 

How to use your iPhone, iPad or Mac to borrow ebooks from the library

You may be familiar with purchasing books and magazines for your iPhone and iPad, but have you ever borrowed an ebook or digital edition of a magazine from your local library?  As more and more local libraries are adding online digital catalogs of books for borrowing, it’s a great — and cheaper! — way of building up your digital library for free.  After trying out a few methods for using the resources of your local library to borrow electronic versions of your favorite ebooks, magazines and audiobooks, I’ve written up a quick guide to follow.

Janeites: The curious American cult of Jane Austen

Two centuries after her most famous work, Jane Austen inspires huge devotion in the US. What makes this most English of writers so appealing to Americans?
She wrote it herself in 1813: "How much sooner one tires of any thing than of a book."
Jane Austen's own work is a case in point. It may be 200 years since her most celebrated novel, Pride and Prejudice, was published, but in the US she is the subject of more wildly devotional fan-worship than ever.
With their conventions, Regency costumes and self-written "sequels" to their heroine's novels, Austen's most dedicated adherents display a fervency easily rivalling that of the subcultures around Star Trek or Harry Potter.