JASNA Oregon & SW Washington Region
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The Secret of the Jane Austen Industry

3/30/2015

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What accounts for Jane Austen’s enduring appeal? A voice with a modern sensibility, says best-selling author Alexander McCall Smith in his piece, "The Secret of the Jane Austen Industry," recently published in The Wall Street Journal. 
Secret of the Jane Austen Industry news article
"The poet W.H. Auden said of Sigmund Freud that he was no longer just a person but had become a climate of opinion. That is about as effusive a compliment as one can imagine, and there are very few thinkers or writers who merit it. But one who undoubtedly does is Jane Austen. She is not only a climate of opinion, she is a movement, a mood, a lifestyle, an attitude and, perhaps most tellingly of all, a fridge magnet. 


"[. . .] Tolstoy, Dickens and Proust are all remembered, and still read, but they do not have countless fans throughout the world who reread their books each year, who eagerly await the latest television or movie adaptation, who attend conventions in period costume, and who no doubt dream about the heroes and heroines of their novels." 

~ Alexander McCall Smith for The Wall Street Journal
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Register now for our spring program!

3/29/2015

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RSVP illustration
Don't forget to register for the JASNA spring program on Saturday, April 18th! Come join us as we "Undress Mr. Darcy" and learn about Regency fashion. RSVP with our Regional Coordinator Kim Higgins, who is the registrar for this program; email her at the jasna.orswwa@gmail.com email address. 

More details can be found on our 2015 Events page. Carpooling info can be found on our Carpooling page.

We hope to see you there!

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You are cordially invited to attend...

3/13/2015

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Here you will find your invitation to our 2015 Program event, "Undressing Mr. Darcy." The event will take place on Saturday, April 18, 2015, at 12:30 p.m. at the Holy Names Heritage Center in Lake Oswego. Reservations are required for this event, at $15 per person. Please email our Regional Coordinator, Kim Higgins, with your reservation at the jasna.orswwa@gmail.com email address.

We will also be having a tag sale at the event this year! All proceeds will go to the Tribute Grant fund. Please bring any items ("Austenesque" or representing the U.K. in some way, plus any books you might want to donate) directly to the event. You will place your item(s) on the table marked with the price you deem appropriate.

See below for the public version of the event's flyer. Information for this event can also be found on our 2015 Events page.
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Tribute Grant reminder

3/13/2015

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Please think about applying to go to the AGM in Louisville in October! The deadline is April 15th. Go to our Tribute Grant 2015 page for FAQs and to download a copy of the online application. The process is easy! 
JASNA AGM 2015 banner
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Local P&P play running through March 14

3/8/2015

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Picture
As mentioned in today's reading group discussion of Sanditon, there is a local school production of Pride & Prejudice, with performances running through this week, and ending on Saturday, March 14. The ACMA Theatre Company production comes highly recommended from our Regional Coordinator, Kim Higgins!

More details, including dates, times, ticket prices, and more are available on the ACMA Theatre Company website. 

ACMA Theatre Company is a program of Arts & Communication Magnet Academy (ACMA), a publicly funded arts magnet school for grades 6 through 12 in the Beaverton School District.
Here's the teaser for the play:
Elizabeth Bennet & Mr. Darcy have a date – with destiny, as Jane Austen’s most popular novel comes to life on stage in the ACMA Theatre Company’s production of Pride and Prejudice. This quick paced production, adapted and staged by David Sikking (recipient of the Beaverton ArtsCommission’s Outstanding Art Instructor Award) faithfully relishes the language Jane Austen penned for this witty romantic comedy.
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Sanditon Discussion Preparation for March 8 Reading Group

3/1/2015

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The topic for the upcoming Reading Group discussion, scheduled for this upcoming Sunday, March 8, is Jane Austen's final work, Sanditon. The discussion leaders will be Jennifer and Sam Snoek-Brown. Please read the following in preparation for the reading group discussion:

While Sanditon is an unfinished novel, comprised of only 12 chapters, there are so many opportunities for rich discussion and so many themes that we could potentially discuss as a group. While Sam and I were discussing the unfinished novel this weekend, within only a few minutes we had listed multiple potential discussion topics, including (but not limited to):
  • Health fads and treatments in Jane Austen's time
  • Seaside resorts and the commercialism and allure of sea-bathing in Jane Austen's time
  • Jane Austen's own failing health at the time of writing Sanditon
  • The theme of communication -- and miscommunication
  • The theme of extreme change represented in Sanditon in multiple ways
  • Comparisons to other works of Jane Austen
  • Speculating what Sanditon reveals of Jane Austen's writing if this were the FIRST work of hers you read
  • The meaning and importance of "subscription libraries" in society during Jane Austen's time
  • Commentary of other novels and authors mentioned in Sandition
  • Connections between Northanger Abbey and Sanditon
  • Connections between Mansfield Park and Sanditon
  • The writing and drafting process evident in Sanditon -- as well as the editing process of its subsequent publication
  • The numerous versions and popularity of the continuations Sanditon has spawned

As you can see, there is so much potential represented within so few pages!

So how to narrow this down to a single discussion? Sam and I decided to go back to the source -- or rather, the source of Sanditon's initial presentation to the public, which was in 1870 through J.E. Austen-Leigh's memoir of his aunt Jane Austen. In that memoir, in Chapter XIII, Austen-Leigh described the writing of Sanditon and included his own personal summary of it, along with substantial excerpts from Austen's text. The full manuscript of Sanditon was not published until 1925. (Scroll down to the bottom of this message for links to his memoir online.)

Therefore, Sam and I have pulled out the following discussion questions/themes relating to J.E. Austen-Leigh's original introduction of Sanditon. 
  • What do we make of the title, Sanditon? The nephew refers to Sanditon only as "The Last Work," but says it was untitled. The family named it "Sanditon," but some sources indicate Jane Austen's original working title was "The Brothers."
  • Is there any indication as to why Jane Austen began this last work, and why did she set it aside a few months before her death? The nephew very clearly lays out the start and end dates of Austen's work on Sanditon, and uses metaphorical language to describe his own view of why Austen worked on this "last work" while she was ailing:  "...it is certain that the mine at which she had so long laboured was not worked out, and that she was still diligently employed in collecting fresh materials from it." 
  • Is there a primary heroine? The nephew states, "...nor was any heroine yet perceptible, who, like Fanny Price, or Anne Elliot, might draw round her the sympathies of the reader."
  • What indications are there of the story's direction? The nephew states, "... there was scarcely any indication what the course of the story was to be."
  • And finally, what can we, as readers, judge about the work's quality? The nephew states, "It is more difficult to judge of the quality of a work so little advanced."

For sources and/or further reading, please feel free to explore the following:
  • E-text of Sanditon available online in multiple formats at https://archive.org/details/Sanditon
  • E-text of J.E. Austen-Leigh's 1870 memoir available online through Project Gutenberg (scroll down to Chapter XIII, "The Last Work")
  • Links to more info about seabathing, seaside resorts, health issues, etc. relating to Sanditon here on the Austenonly website, http://austenonly.com/about/jane-austens-sanditon/
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    JASNA ORSWWA

    Welcome to the web site of the Oregon & SW Washington Region of the Jane Austen Society of North America (JASNA). We are a friendly and active group dedicated to the appreciation of Jane Austen's life and works.

    Please email for more info! Also, please let us know if you have interesting Austen-related news/tidbits to share with everyone here on the home page.


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JASNA Oregon & SW Washington Region

Welcome to the web site of the JASNA Oregon & SW Washington Region, a friendly and active group dedicated to the appreciation of Jane Austen's life and works.

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