Jane Austen was born in Steventon,
England, in 1775, where she lived for the first twenty-five years of her life.
Her father, George Austen, was the rector of the local parish and taught her
largely at home. She began to write while in her teens and completed the
original manuscript of Pride and Prejudice, titled First Impressions,
between 1796 and 1797. A publisher rejected the manuscript, and it was not
until 1809 that Austen began the revisions that would bring it to its final
form. Pride and Prejudice was published in January 1813, two years after
Sense and Sensibility, her first novel, and it achieved a popularity
that has endured to this day. Austen published four more novels: Mansfield
Park, Emma, Northanger Abbey, and Persuasion. The last two were
published in 1818, a year after her death.
During Austen’s life, however, only
her immediate family knew of her authorship of these novels. At one point, she
wrote behind a door that creaked when visitors approached; this warning allowed
her to hide manuscripts before anyone could enter. Though publishing
anonymously prevented her from acquiring an authorial reputation, it also
enabled her to preserve her privacy at a time when English society associated a
female’s entrance into the public sphere with a reprehensible loss of
femininity. Additionally, Austen may have sought anonymity because of the more
general atmosphere of repression pervading her era. As the Napoleonic Wars
(1800–1815) threatened the safety of monarchies throughout Europe, government
censorship of literature proliferated.
The social milieu of Austen’s
Regency England was particularly stratified, and class divisions were rooted in family connections and wealth. In
her work, Austen is often critical of the assumptions and prejudices of
upper-class England. She distinguishes
between internal merit (goodness of person) and external merit (rank and
possessions). Though she frequently satirizes snobs, she also pokes fun at the
poor breeding and misbehavior of those lower on the social scale.
Nevertheless, Austen was in many ways a realist, and the England she depicts is
one in which social mobility is limited and class-consciousness is strong.
Socially regimented ideas of
appropriate behavior for each gender factored into Austen’s work as well. While
social advancement for young men lay in the military, church, or law, the chief
method of self-improvement for women was the acquisition of wealth. Women could
only accomplish this goal through successful marriage, which explains the
ubiquity of matrimony as a goal and topic of conversation in Austen’s writing.
Though young women of Austen’s day had more freedom to choose their husbands than in the early eighteenth
century, practical considerations continued to limit their options.
Even so, critics often accuse Austen of portraying a limited
world. As a clergyman’s daughter, Austen
would have done parish work and was certainly aware of the poor around her.
However, she wrote about her own world, not theirs. The critiques she makes of class structure seem to include only the
middle class and upper class; the lower classes, if they appear at all, are
generally servants who seem perfectly pleased with their lot. This lack of
interest in the lives of the poor may be a failure on Austen’s part, but it
should be understood as a failure shared by almost all of English society at
the time.
In general, Austen occupies a curious position
between the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Her favorite writer, whom she often quotes in her novels, was
Dr. Samuel Johnson, the great model of eighteenth-century classicism and reason.
Her plots, which often feature characters forging their respective ways through
an established and rigid social hierarchy, bear similarities to such works of
Johnson’s contemporaries as Pamela, written by Samuel Richardson. Austen’s
novels also display an ambiguity about emotion and an appreciation for intelligence and natural beauty that
aligns them with Romanticism. In their awareness of the conditions of modernity and city life and the
consequences for family structure and individual characters, they prefigure much Victorian literature
(as does her usage of such elements as frequent formal social gatherings,
sketchy characters, and scandal).
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