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Monday, 15 December 2025

Jane Austen’s 250

16/12/2025 is the 250th anniversary of Jane Austen’s birth. 

Over the years, I have written about her characters, ethics, and technique, and she has such a firmly established place in the Western Canon that there’s no need to praise, so I’d like to write a bit about what Jane Austen means to me.

Two recurring themes in Austen’s novels that particularly resonate with me are balance, and the difference between appearance and reality (also a major theme throughout Shakespeare’s plays)—over and over again, Jane Austen writes about misperception and misunderstanding and hypocrisy and deceit… Mansfield Park is my favourite of her novels because it explores these ideas so well, because it’s the most complex and visual of her novels, and because it also conveys the sense of displacement, akin to the experience of an immigrant: Fanny Price doesn’t quite feel at home at Mansfield Park, but also doesn’t feel at home back at her parents’ house in Portsmouth.

But lately I have realised that there have been moments when I felt something like embarrassment, or defensiveness, about Austen because she is narrow, because she doesn’t write about death, because she doesn’t write about Big Ideas—that’s so foolish—is not love a serious theme? Is not courtship? Marriage? Coming to understand yourself, and grow, through love? Picking the right husband? Resisting the pressure to accept a man you know would make you miserable? Living and having feelings again at a time when you feel you have lost your chance of happiness? There is nothing trivial about any of this. Screen adaptations and (some part of) the fandom might turn Jane Austen into romance or chicklit, but she is subtle and serious, and I do think she is better than anyone at writing about love—about falling in love, about getting a better understanding of yourself thanks to love, about adapting and improving yourself for someone you love.

In her four masterpieces—Pride and Prejudice, Mansfield Park, Emma, Persuasion—Jane Austen explores different kinds of love, different aspects, different angles. She adopts different tones. She uses different techniques. Pride and Prejudice for example is light, bright, and sparkling, with lots of dialogue. Mansfield Park is sombre, and she uses more layers and metaphors. Emma is where she masters the free indirect speech, blending the voice of the third-person narrator with the voice of the protagonist, colouring your perspective of the scene. Persuasion is autumnal, her warmest and most romantic novel. I say Austen is narrow—and in some sense, she is—but these four novels are all quite different. She is wonderful. 

It is no wonder that 250 years since her birth, over 210 years since the publication of her novels, Jane Austen is still one of the most celebrated and beloved writers. 

8 comments:

  1. Jane Austen is one of the few authors whose books I reread.

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  2. Hello, Di! Out of the ones you mention, the only one I haven't read yet is Mansfield Park. Maybe in 2026?
    One thing I kind of enjoy in Austen's novels is something that, for lack of a better expression, I like to term 'Olympian Comedy'. The world of her characters, at least in the books I've read, is always this late 18th century upper-middle to upper class setting in which most everyday problems have disappeared from the stage. This is not meant as criticism: it feels like the kind of warm-hearted comedy that the Olympian gods of the Greeks would enjoy watching and imitating in their spare time, and a kind of a prelude to a world were material necessity has been partially banished (somewhat like in modern Western societies, too). Of course, there are class issues, as in the consequences and requirements for prospective couples, but that sort of gamemanship, I feel, is eternal to the human condition of us as, to a very high degree, status-seeking animals.

    (Manuel, from X)

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    1. Manuel,
      Why wait till 2026? Read it now. Today is her birthday.
      As for your point, I have addressed it here: https://thelittlewhiteattic.blogspot.com/2025/05/on-narrowness-of-jane-austen.html

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    2. Such enthusiasm, Di! 😀 But unfortunately, I don't have a copy of Mansfield Park at hand, or in English in a nearby library (I could read it in some pdf, but I only like doing that for books that don't require a lot attention). I also have a queue of books I *should* have read in 2025 and still haven't: Xunzi, the Complete Text, by Eric L. Hutton, The Great Age of Chinese Poetry: The High Tang by Stephen Owen, The Elephant in the Brain, by Robin Hanson and Khusrau and Shirin, by Nezami Ganjavi. It'll have to wait for at least a couple of months.

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  3. I think Sense and Sensibility explores sibling love, and not romantic love. When I read it from that perspective, it really shines.

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    Replies
    1. When I talk about Jane Austen, I generally don't think of that one or Northanger Abbey.
      That said, you're not wrong that sibling love is a big part of it, but romantic love is also there.

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