Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Short “Takes” on Austen: summarizing the controversy between literary purists and film enthusiasts
- 2 Janeite culture: what does the name “Jane Austen” authorize?
- 3 “Such a transformation!”: translation, imitation, and intertextuality in Jane Austen on screen
- 4 Two Mansfield Parks: purist and postmodern
- 5 Sense and Sensibility in a postfeminist world: sisterhood is still powerful
- 6 Regency romance shadowing in the visual motifs of Roger Michell's Persuasion
- 7 Filming romance: Persuasion
- 8 Emma, interrupted: speaking Jane Austen in fiction and film
- 9 Reimagining Jane Austen: the 1940 and 1995 film versions of Pride and Prejudice
- 10 Emma and the art of adaptation
- 11 Clues for the clueless
- Questions for discussion
- Filmography
- Bibliography
- Index
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Short “Takes” on Austen: summarizing the controversy between literary purists and film enthusiasts
- 2 Janeite culture: what does the name “Jane Austen” authorize?
- 3 “Such a transformation!”: translation, imitation, and intertextuality in Jane Austen on screen
- 4 Two Mansfield Parks: purist and postmodern
- 5 Sense and Sensibility in a postfeminist world: sisterhood is still powerful
- 6 Regency romance shadowing in the visual motifs of Roger Michell's Persuasion
- 7 Filming romance: Persuasion
- 8 Emma, interrupted: speaking Jane Austen in fiction and film
- 9 Reimagining Jane Austen: the 1940 and 1995 film versions of Pride and Prejudice
- 10 Emma and the art of adaptation
- 11 Clues for the clueless
- Questions for discussion
- Filmography
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Timothy Corrigan has argued that the relationship between the two media of film and literature has “a history of ambivalence, confrontation, and mutual dependence,” succinctly summing up the range of critical reaction to film productions of Jane Austen novels. The “mutual dependence” is evident: Austen films have brought her novels a far wider readership than she herself could have imagined. Undeniably, at least some viewers experience the films and then turn to the books for a deeper, richer, much more extended experience. Certainly, given modern proclivities, without the film as bait to attract more general readers and to help justify including the novels in school reading lists, Austen's readership might well be a far more limited, esoteric group than it is today. Perfectly worthy writers of Austen's time have been far less lucky than she; the enthusiasm for the redoubtable Henry Fielding that followed the wonderful Albert Finney screen version of Tom Jones was brief and unsustainable once readers faced up to unfamiliar literary sensibilities and leisurely, extended texts. The story of Robinson Crusoe is made and remade (as in Castaway featuring Tom Hanks), but it is safe to predict there will be no boom in Defoe book sales. Generally speaking, Austen is unique among writers of her period for none of her contemporaries transcend the narrow precincts of “classic literature” bookshelves.
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- Jane Austen on Screen , pp. 1 - 8Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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