PERSUASIONS ON-LINE V.33, NO.1 (Winter 2012)

Jane Austen Bibliography, 2011

Deborah Barnum

 

Deborah Barnum (email: books@bygonebooksvermont.com) is a former law librarian, now a bookseller of fine and collectible books, the Regional Coordinator for the JASNA Vermont Region, and an inveterate reader and collector of bibliographies.

 

A few words on format:  the Bibliography has five sections:

  1. Austen Editions:  original works, under Austen if no extensive annotation or editing is involved, otherwise under the editor’s name

  2. Austen Circle:  original works/editions by and about Austen family members and friends

  3. Studies:  biographical, critical, and interpretive works

  4. Dissertations:  a select, rather than exhaustive, list of works specifically on Austen

  5. Popular Culture:  sequels, continuations, mash-ups, films, merchandise, etc.

Explanatory notes are at the end of the document.

 

 

1. Austen Editions

 

Austen, Jane. Emma. New York: Harper Perennial Classics, 2011.

 

_____. Emma. New York: HarperTeen, 2011.

 

_____. Emma. 4th ed. Ed. George Justice. New York: Norton, 2011. Norton Critical Editions.

 

_____. Emma. Illus. Jillian Tamaki (cover). London: Penguin, 2011. Penguin Threads.

 

_____. Jane Austen: Four Novels. Introd. Andrew Taggart. San Diego: Canterbury Classics, 2011. Includes Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, Emma, and Northanger Abbey.

 

_____. Mansfield Park. Ed. Kathryn Sutherland. 1996. London: Penguin, 2011. Clothbound Classics.

 

_____. Northanger Abbey. Ed. Marilyn Butler. 1995. London: Penguin, 2011. Clothbound Classics.

 

_____. Persuasion. London: John Murray, 2011. The Flipback edition.

 

_____. Persuasion. Ed. Gillian Beer. 1998. London: Penguin, 2011. Clothbound Classics.

 

_____. Persuasion. Introd. Colm Toibin. New York: Penguin, 2011.

 

_____. Pride and Prejudice. London: John Murray, 2011. The Flipback edition.

 

_____. Pride and Prejudice. London: Reader’s Digest, 2011.

 

_____. Pride and Prejudice. Narr. Carolyn Seymour. Ashland: Blackstone, 2011. Unabridged CD.

 

_____. Sanditon, Lady Susan, and The History of England: The Juvenilia and Shorter Works of Jane Austen. Introd. Kathryn White. London: Collector’s Library, 2011. Includes Cassandra Austen’s illustrations for The History of England.

 

_____. Sense and Sensibility. London: John Murray, 2011. The Flipback edition.

 

_____. Sense and Sensibility. London: Michael O’Mara, 2011.

 

_____. Sense and Sensibility. Ed. Margaret C. Sullivan. Illus. Cassandra Chouinard. [N.p.]: LibriFiles, 2011. The Jane Austen Bicentenary Library.

 

_____. Sense and Sensibility. Foreword Catherine Schine. Illus. Audrey Niffenegger (cover). New York: Penguin, 2011.

 

_____. Sense and Sensibility: A Novel in Three Volumes. Illus. Niroot Puttapipat. Bath: Palazzo, 2011.

 

Austen, Jane, Thomas Love Peacock, and Eaton Stannard Barrett. Gothic Parodies: Northanger Abbey, Nightmare Abbey, and The Heroine: or, Adventures of Cherubina (Volumes I, II, III). Ed. Yona Rodrigue Cohen. [N.p.]: ELL Reading, 2011.

 

“Captain Wentworth’s Letter from Jane Austen’s Persuasion.” [North Vancouver, BC]: Bowler, 2011. A letterpress limited edition of Wentworth’s letter to Anne.

 

Le Faye, Deirdre, ed. Jane Austen’s Letters. 4th ed. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2011.

 

Morrison, Robert, ed. Persuasion: An Annotated Edition. By Jane Austen. Cambridge: Belknap, Harvard UP, 2011.

 

“Mr. Darcy’s Letter from Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice.” [North Vancouver, BC]: Bowler, 2011. A letterpress limited edition of Darcy’s letter to Elizabeth.

 

Shapard, David M., ed. The Annotated Sense and Sensibility. By Jane Austen. New York: Anchor, 2011.

 

 

2. Austen Circle

 

Barsham, Diana. “Jane Austen and William Hayley: The Evidence of Fragments.” JAS Report (2011): 94-104.

 

Buck, Alanah, and Helen Atkinson. “The Life of Henry Edgar Austen Esq: Jane Austen’s Strange Prophecy.” JAS Report (2011): 54-64.

 

Clarke, Janet. “Anne Austen of Ferring and the Age of Scientific Discovery.” JAS Report (2011): 32-42.

 

Dunning, Ronald. “Akin to Jane—An Austen Family Website.” JAS Report (2011): 118-20.

 

Hale, S. G. “William and Rebecca Austen: Jane Austen’s Grandparents.” Austentations 11 (2011): 30-31.

 

Hillan, Sophia. May, Lou & Cass: Jane Austen’s Nieces in Ireland. Belfast: Blackstaff, 2011.

 

Hurst, Jane. “‘Mr. Griespach a musick master.’” JAS Report (2011): 92-93.

 

Huxley, Victoria. “Adlestrop and the Austen Connection: The Leigh Family.” JAS Report (2011): 105-18.

 

Lane, Maggie. “Jane’s Forgotten Brother.” JARW July-Aug. 2011: 24-28.

 

_____. “Loitering with James.” JARW May-June 2011: 23-27.

 

Le Faye, Deirdre. “Jane Austen and the Miss Curlings.” Notes and Queries 58 (256).1 (2011): 75-77.

 

Wilkes, Sue. “Our Father . . . [Clerical Fathers].” JARW Mar.-Apr. 2011: 35-39. About George Austen and Patrick Brontë.

 

Wilson, Margaret. “The Austen Family in Barfreston.” Austentations 11 (2011): 26-29.

 

_____. “Jane Austen and the Knatchbulls.” JAS Report (2011): 80-91.

 

 

3. Studies

 

Alliston, April. “Female Quixotism and the Novel: Character and Plausibility, Honesty and Fidelity.” Eighteenth Century: Theory and Interpretation 52.3-4 (2011): 249-69. Discusses Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey, Samuel Richardson’s Clarissa, David Hume’s History of England, and Mme. de Lafayette’s La Princesse de Clèves.

 

Alsina, Victòria. “Translating Free Indirect Discourse: Two Spanish Versions of Jane Austen’s Persuasion.” New Voices in Translation Studies 7.1 (2011): 1-18. Also on the Web: http://www.iatis.org/images/stories/publications/new-voices/Issue7-2011/article-alsina-2011.pdf.

 

Antosa, Silvia. “Sexing Emma: Stable and Unstable Bodies in Jane Austen’s Fictional World.” Marroni and Lauri-Lucente 205-30.

 

Bailey, Courtney. “‘I must speak to you by such means as are within my reach’: The Language of Agency and Passivity in Persuasion’s Constancy.” Sigma Tau Delta Review 8 (2011): 31-39. Also on the Web: http://www.mercer.edu/english/documents/Courtney_Bailey.pdf.

 

Bander, Elaine. “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly: Reading Character in Sense and Sensibility.” Persuasions On-Line 32.1 (2011). Web.

 

Barchas, Janine. “Dashwood Celebrity.” Sensibilities 43 (2011): 59-83.

 

Barnum, Deborah. “Jane Austen Bibliography, 2007.” Persuasions On-Line 32.1 (2011). Web.

 

_____. “Jane Austen Bibliography, 2010.” Persuasions On-Line 32.1 (2011). Web.

 

Batchelor, Jennie. “The Austens and Their Pocketbooks.” Austentations 11 (2011): 7-15.

 

Baudot, Laura. “‘Nothing Really in It’: Gothic Interiors and the Externals of the Courtship Plot in Northanger Abbey.” Eighteenth-Century Fiction 24.2 (2011): 325-52.

 

Benis, Toby R. “The Austen Effect: Remaking Romantic History as a Novel of Manners.” Wordsworth Circle 42.3 (2011): 183-93.

 

Bernard, Jean Alphonse. “Discourse by a French Janeite.” JAS Report (2011): 159-61.

 

_____. “En prenant le thé à Chawton: Hommage à Jane Austen.” Commentaire 34.136 (2011): 1159-62.

 

Bertelsen, Lance. “An Unfortunate Period: Revisiting the Opening Paragraph of Persuasion.” Modern Philology 108.3 (2011): 462-67.

 

Bethune, Brian. “P. D. James Enters the Austenverse.” Maclean’s 26 Dec. 2011: 84.

 

Bilger, Audrey. “Just Like a Woman.” Los Angeles Review of Books 5 Sept. 2011. Web. http://lareviewofbooks.org/article.php?type=&id=135&fulltext=1&media.

 

Biro, George, and James H. Leavesley. What Killed Jane Austen? And Other Medical Mysteries, Marvels and Mayhem. 1998, 2007. Stroud: History, 2011.

 

Bonaparte, Felicia. “‘Let other pens dwell on guilt and misery’: The Ordination of the Text and the Subversion of ‘Religion’ in Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park.” Religion and Literature 43.2 (2011): 45-67.

 

Bradney-Smith, Adrienne. “Jane Austen and Coaching Inns.” Sensibilities 42 (2011): 63-82.

 

Bray, Joe. “Belinda, Emma, and the ‘Likeness’ of the Portrait.” Nineteenth-Century Contexts 33.1 (2011): 1-15.

 

Brewer, David A. “Counting, Resonance, and Form, A Speculative Manifesto (with Notes).” Eighteenth-Century Fiction 24.2 (2011): 161-70.

 

Brodey, Inger Sigrun. “Ema: The New Face of Jane Austen in Japan.” Japan Studies Review 15 (2011): 7-33.

 

Brownstein, Rachel M. Why Jane Austen? New York: Columbia UP, 2011.

 

Bullamore, Tim. “Sandy Lerner: ‘Why I Bought Chawton.’” JARW Mar.-Apr. 2011: 10-17.

 

Burns, Margie. “Comic Resolution, Humorous Loose Ends in Austen’s Novels.” Persuasions 33 (2011): 238-43.

 

Burrows, John. Jane Austen’s Emma. 1968. London: Routledge, 2011. Routledge Library Editions: Jane Austen.

 

Callus, Ivan. “Jane and Jacques: Matchmaking, Telepathy and Deconstruction in Jane Austen’s Emma.” Marroni and Lauri-Lucente 133-68.

 

Calvo, Clara. “Rewriting Lear’s Untender Daughter: Fanny Price as a Regency Cordelia in Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park.” Shakespeare Survey: An Annual Survey of Shakespeare Studies and Production 58 (2005): 83-94. 2011 paperback rpt.

 

Caplan, Clive. “1797: The Austens at War.” JAS Report (2011): 76-80.

 

Carroll, Laura, Christopher Palmer, Sue Thomas, and Rebecca Waese. “Austen’s and Michell’s Persuasion in the University Classroom: Pedagogical Strategies.” Victorian Literature and Film Adaptation. Ed. Abigail Burnham Bloom and Mary Sanders Pollock. Amherst, NY: Cambria, 2011. 225-41.

 

Castorani, Luigina. “Fashionable Emma.” Marroni and Lauri-Lucente 245-62.

 

Chawton House Library. Female Spectator. 15.1-4 (2011). Ed. Gillian Dow, Helen Cole, and Sandy White. Alton, Hampshire: Chawton House Library, 2011. Austen-related essays individually cited.

 

Chesterton, G. K. “Jane Austen in the General Election.” In Defense of Sanity: The Best Essays of G. K. Chesterton. Ed. Dale Ahlquist, Joseph Pearce, and Aidan Mackey. San Francisco: Ignatius, 2011. 196-200. From Come to Think of It. 1930.

 

Clark, Lorraine. “Remembering Nature: Soliloquy as Aesthetic Form in Mansfield Park.” Eighteenth-Century Fiction 24.2 (2011): 353-79.

 

Clarke, Janet. “Jane Austen: The Worthing Connection.” Transactions 22 (2011): 32-40.

 

Clery, E. J. “Gender.” Copeland and McMaster 159-75.

 

Collins, Irene. “Jane Austen and the Art of ‘Polite Shopping.’” JAS Report (2011): 139-43.

 

“A Conversation between Diana Shervington and Marilyn Joice: A Transcript of the Interview Conducted at the Sidmouth Conference.” JAS Report (2011): 18-25. With Patrick Stokes, Conference Chairman.

 

Copeland, Edward. “Money.” Copeland and McMaster 127-43.

 

Copeland, Edward, and Juliet McMaster.The Cambridge Companion to Jane Austen. 2nd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2011. Essays individually cited.

 

Cordón, Joanne. “Speaking Up for Catherine Morland: Cixous and the Feminist Heroine.” Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies 32.3 (2011): 41-63.

 

Corley, Tony. “Jane Austen’s Dealings with Her Publishers.” JAS Report (2011): 127-38.

 

Courtemanche, Eleanor. “Omniscient Narrators and the Return of the Gothic in Northanger Abbey and Bleak House.” The ‘Invisible Hand’ and British Fiction, 1818-1860: Adam Smith, Political Economy, and the Genre of Realism. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011. 78-101.

 

Craig, Sheryl. “‘Wealth has much to do with it’: The Economics of Sense and Sensibility.” Persuasions 33 (2011): 13-28.

 

Craik, Wendy A. Jane Austen: The Six Novels. 1965. London: Routledge, 2011. Routledge Library Editions: Jane Austen.

 

Curtis, Katherine Elizabeth. “Temper Tantrums and Sugar Plums: Childish Behavior in Sense and Sensibility.” Persuasions On-Line 32.1 (2011). Web.

 

Dahmer, Cornelia. “‘Books of a Serious Stamp’: Conduct Books für junge Damen im Spiegel der englischen Literatur des 18. Jahrhunderts.” [Conduct Books for Young Ladies in the Mirror of the English Literature of the 18th Century]. Forschung trifft Literatur: Aktuelle Forschungsthemen im Spiegel literarischer Werke. [Research Meets Literature: Current Research Topics in the Mirror of Literary Works]. Ed. Christina Knoll and Vanessa-Isabelle Reinwand. Oberhausen, Ger.: Athena; 2011. 137-51. Discusses Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, Maria Edgeworth’s Ennui, and Richard Brinsley Sheridan’s The Rivals.

 

Danta, Chris. “Revolution at a Distance: Jane Austen and Personalised History.” The French Revolution and the British Novel in the Romantic Period. Ed. A. D. Cousins, Dani Napton, and Stephanie Russo. New York: Lang, 2011. 137-51.

 

Darrow, Kathy D., ed. “Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey (1818).” Nineteenth Century Literature Criticism. Vol. 242. Detroit: Gale, 2011. 1-93.

 

Davis, Kathryn. “Exonerating Mrs. Dashwood.” Persuasions 33 (2011): 61-74.

 

Daylight, Tegan Bennett. “Sense and Sensibility—A Conversation.” Sensibilities 43 (2011): 48-58.

 

Deresiewicz, William. “A Jane Austen Education.” Chronicle of Higher Education 1 May 2011: B10-12. Also on the Web. http://chronicle.com/article/A-Jane-Austen-Education/127269/.

 

_____. A Jane Austen Education: How Six Novels Taught Me About Love, Friendship, and the Things That Really Matter. New York: Penguin, 2011.

 

D’Ezio, Marianna. “‘Musing on the difference of woman’s destiny’: Reconsidering Emma’s ‘Happy’ Ending.” Marroni and Lauri-Lucente 169-84.

 

Doody, Margaret Ann. “The Early Short Fiction.” Copeland and McMaster 72-86.

 

Dooley, Gillian, transcriber. Austen Music Transcripts. Flinders Academic Commons, 2011. Web. This collection consists of transcripts of a selection of items from the Austen family music collections owned by the Jane Austen’s House Museum and descendants of the Austen family, and held at the Hampshire Records Office, Winchester, and at Chawton House Library. http://dspace.flinders.edu.au/jspui/handle/2328/15193/browse?type=author&order=ASC&rpp=20&value=Gillian+Dooley+%5Btranscriber%5D.

 

_____. “A Red, Red Rose.” JARW Jan.-Feb. 2011: 49-52. About Jane Austen and Robert Burns.

 

Duckenfield, Bridget. “Jane Austen and Worldly Worth.” Austentations 11 (2011): 32-38.

 

Duke, Jennifer. “Shifting Sands.” JARW July-Aug. 2011: 30-36. How Austen depicts the sea in her novels.

 

Dunsany, Blossom, ed. The Jane Austen Concordance: A Twenty-First Century Accounting of Jane Austen’s Literary DNA. [Author]: Dunsany, 2011.

 

Durey, Jill Felicity. “A Stabbing in Chawton, Jane Austen, and Emma.” Notes and Queries 58 (256).1 (2011): 80-82.

 

Eberle-Sinatra, Michael. “Totally Clueless: Heckerling and Queer Sexuality in Austen’s Emma.” Victorian Literature and Film Adaptation. Ed. Abigail Burnham Bloom and Mary Sanders Pollock. Amherst, NY: Cambria, 2011. 123-36.

 

Ellis, Elizabeth. “Curiosities and Delights: Regency Drawing Room Collections in the Antipodes.” Sensibilities 42 (2011): 83-100.

 

Ellis, Markman. “Jane Austen and the Credit Crunch of 1816.” JAS Report (2011): 42-53.

 

Evans, Mary. Jane Austen and the State. 1987. London: Routledge, 2011. Routledge Library Editions: Jane Austen.

 

Fergus, Jan. “The Professional Woman Writer.” Copeland and McMaster 1-20.

 

Fessenbecker, Patrick. “Jane Austen on Love and Pedagogical Power.” SEL Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 51.4 (2011): 747-63.

 

Fisher, Clare. “Sir Charles Grandison—‘An amazing horrid book.’” JAS Report (2011): 153-58.

 

Flint, Christopher. “Only a Female Pen: Women Writers and Fictions of the Page.” The Appearance of Print in Eighteenth-Century Fiction. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2011. A good part of this chapter is about Austen.

 

Flynn, Carol Houlihan. “The Letters.” Copeland and McMaster 97-110.

 

Folsom, Marcia McClintock. “The Narrator’s Voice and the Sense of Sense and Sensibility.” Persuasions 33 (2011): 29-39.

 

Ford, Susan Allen. “Editor’s Note: Interesting Without Fatiguing.” Persuasions On-Line 32.1 (2011). Web.

 

_____. “Gene Koppel: In Memoriam.” Persuasions On-Line 32.1 (2011). Web.

 

_____. “Mrs. Dashwood’s Insight: Reading Edward Ferrars and Columella; or, The Distressed Anchoret.” Persuasions 33 (2011): 75-88.

 

Fowles, Anthony. Focus on Mansfield Park by Jane Austen. Rev. ed. London: Greenwich Exchange, 2011.

 

Fullerton, Susannah. “The World’s Greatest Heroine.” Sensibilities 43 (2011): 5-17.

 

Galperin, William. “Adapting Jane Austen: The Surprising Fidelity of Clueless.” Wordsworth Circle 42.3 (2011): 187-93. Also in: Film and Literature: An Introduction and Reader. 2nd ed. Ed. Timothy Corrigan. London: Routledge, 2011. 351-61.

 

Gardiner, Stephen Mark. “Jane Austen vs. Climate Economics.” A Perfect Moral Storm: The Ethical Tragedy of Climate Change. New York: Oxford UP, 2011. 301-38. This chapter discusses the moral arguments of the “dubious Dashwoods.”

 

Gay, Penny. “Emma and Persuasion.” Copeland and McMaster 55-71.

 

Gemmill, Katie. “Jane Austen as Editor: Letters on Fiction and the Cancelled Chapters of Persuasion.” Eighteenth-Century Fiction 24.1 (2011): 105-22.

 

Giffin, Michael. “The Maturing Heroine: From Jane Austen to Muriel Spark.” Quadrant 55.1-2 (2011): 94-100. Also on the Web: http://www.spanielbooks.com/maturity.pdf.

 

Girouard, Mark. “Jane Austen: Re-Dating Catherine.” Enthusiasms. London: Frances Lincoln, 2011. 8-18.

 

Goodheart, Eugene. “Jane Austen’s Portrait of the Artist as a Young Woman.” Afterword: Conjuring the Literary Dead. Ed. Dale Salwak. Iowa City: U of Iowa P, 2011. 97-107.

 

Grace, Teresa. “Emma Thompson’s Sense and Sensibility: Purloining Jane Austen’s Creation and Adding Things of Her Own.” Sensibilities 43 (2011): 130-51.

 

Graham, Gordon. “Jane Austen and the Japanese Diplomat.” LOGOS: The Journal of the World Book Community 22.2 (2011): 37-40.

 

Grant, Tony. “Jane and Men.” JARW July-Aug. 2011: 52-53.

 

Grundy, Isobel. “Jane Austen and Literary Traditions.” Copeland and McMaster 192-214.

 

Hagan, Kelly. “‘The Imagination Supplied What the Eye Could Not Reach’: The Unconscious Self Deception of Mansfield Park’s Fanny Price.” Persuasions On-Line 32.1 (2011). Web.

 

Hall, Lynda A. “Secret Sharing and Secret Keeping: Lucy Steele’s Triumph in Speculation.” Persuasions 33 (2011): 166-71.

 

_____. “A View from Confinement: Persuasion’s Resourceful Mrs. Smith.” Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies 7.3 (2011). Web. http://www.ncgsjournal.com/issue73/hall.htm.

 

Halsey, Katie. “‘Gossip’ and ‘Twaddle’: Nineteenth-Century Common Readers Make Sense of Jane Austen.” A Return to the Common Reader: Print Culture and the Novel, 1850-1900. Ed. Beth Palmer and Adelene Buckland. Farnham [UK] / Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2011. 69-83.

 

_____. “Jane Austen’s Readers.” Austentations 11 (2011): 16-25.

 

Harbus, Antonina. “Reading Embodied Consciousness in Emma.” SEL Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 51.4 (2011): 765-82.

 

Hardy, John. Jane Austen’s Heroines: Intimacy in Human Relationships. 1984. London: Routledge, 2011. Routledge Library Editions: Jane Austen.

 

Hare, Chris. “Worthing: A New Resort Town.” Transactions 22 (2011): 22-28. An extract from Worthing: A History. 2008.

 

Harris, Diana. “‘Your passion for dead leaves’: Sense, Sensibility and the Sisterly Relationship (Or, Whose Story Is It, Anyway?).” Sensibilities 43 (2011): 18-31.

 

Harris, Jocelyn. “Jane Austen and Celebrity Culture: Shakespeare, Dorothy Jordan and Elizabeth Bennet.” Sensibilities 42 (2011): 15-44.

 

_____. “Pride and Prejudice and Mansfield Park.” Copeland and McMaster 39-54.

 

Hewson, Lance. An Approach to Translation Criticism: Emma and Madame Bovary in Translation. Amsterdam: Benjamins, 2011.

 

Higson, Andrew. Film England: Culturally English Filmmaking since the 1990s. London: Tauris, 2011. Much on Austen, but see especially ch. 5: “Jane Austen: ‘The Hottest Scriptwriter in Hollywood’” (125-60), and ch. 6: “The Austen Screen Franchise in the 2000s” (161-90).

 

Hinkel, Jolayne Johnson. Jane Austen’s Values: A Voice for the Twenty-First Century. [Author], 2011.

 

Hisamori, Kazuko. “Facing a Portrait of the ‘Lover’: Frankenstein’s Monster and the Heroines of Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice.” Persuasions On-Line 32.1 (2011). Web.

 

Holdforth, Lucinda. “The Perils of Polite Society: Manners and Jane Austen.” Sensibilities 42 (2011): 5-14.

 

Jamoussi, Zouheir. Primogeniture and Entail in England: A Survey of Their History and Representation in Literature. 1999. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars, 2011. See Part II, Ch. 2 for a discussion of primogeniture in Austen’s novels (197-258).

 

Jane Austen Society. News Letter: The Jane Austen Society 36, 37 (2011). Ed. David Selwyn.

 

_____. Report for 2011 (2011). Ed. David Selwyn. Essays are individually cited.

 

Jane Austen Society (Kent Branch). Austentations 11 (2011). Ed. Averil Clayton. Select essays are individually cited.

 

Jane Austen Society (Midlands Branch). Transactions 22 (2011). Ed. Dawn Thomas. Select essays are individually cited.

 

Jane Austen Society (Northern Branch). Impressions (2011). Ed. Marilyn Joice.

 

Jane Austen Society of Australia. JASA Chronicle (2011). Ed. Helen Malcher.

 

_____. Sensibilities 42, 43 (2011). Ed. Joanna Penglase. Essays are individually cited.

 

Jane Austen Society of North America. JASNA News 27.1-3 (2011). Ed. Sheryl Craig.

 

_____. “Jane Austen: 200 Years of Sense and Sensibility.” Persuasions: The Jane Austen Journal 33 (2011). Ed. Susan Allen Ford. Essays cited individually. Table of Contents on the Web.

 

_____. Persuasions: The Jane Austen Journal On-Line 32.1 (2011). Ed. Susan Allen Ford. Web. Essays cited individually.

 

Jane Austen’s Regency World. Ed. Tim Bullamore. Bath: Lansdown, 2011. Issues 49-54. Austen-related articles are individually cited.

 

Johnson, Claudia L. “Austen Cults and Cultures.” Copeland and McMaster 232-47.

 

Johnson, Ellen Kennedy. “The Contradictory Rhetoric of Needlework in Jane Austen’s Letters and Novels.” Female Spectator 15. 4 (2011): 4-5.

 

Jones, Hazel. “Marriage in Sense and Sensibility.” Sensibilities 43 (2011): 84-106.

 

Kane, Mary Patricia. “Self-Definition and the Law of Property in Emma.” Marroni and Lauri-Lucente 185-204.

 

Kaplan, Laurie. “London as Text: Teaching Jane Austen’s ‘London’ Novels In Situ.” Persuasions On-Line 32.1 (2011). Web.

 

_____. “The Rushworths of Wimpole Street.” Persuasions 33 (2011): 202-14. Also on the web.

 

Kenney, Theresa. “Aisha, Rajshree Ojha’s Urban Emma: Not Entirely Clueless.” Persuasions On-Line 32.1 (2011). Web.

 

_____. “Jane Austen, Revolution, Socialist Realism, and Reception: A Response to Helong Zhang’s ‘Jane Austen: 100 Years in China.’” Persuasions 33 (2011): 115-22.

 

Keymer, Thomas. “Northanger Abbey and Sense and Sensibility.” Copeland and McMaster 21-38.

 

Kirsch, Adam. Why Trilling Matters. New Haven: Yale UP, 2011. Discusses Trilling’s essays on Austen (136-46).

 

Lacoume, Danièle. “Jane Austen, Le Mariage d’Amour.” Len-Je Lacanien 16.1 (2011): 173-80.

 

Lamb, Jonathan. “Imagination, Conjecture, and Disorder.” Eighteenth-Century Studies 45.1 (2011): 53-69. Discusses Northanger Abbey.

 

Lane, Maggie. “Heroes and Husbands.” JARW Nov.-Dec. 2011: 43-47. The men in Sense and Sensibility.

 

_____. “Home Comforts.” JARW Mar.-Apr. 2011: 7-32.

 

_____. “Words Overheard.” JARW Sept.-Oct. 2011: 30-35.

 

Lau, Beth. “Optimism and Pessimism: Approaching Sense and Sensibility through Cognitive Therapy.” Persuasions 33 (2011): 40-52.

 

Lauri-Lucente, Gloria. “Pride and Prejudice in Fidelity Criticism: The Case of Jane Austen’s Emma.” Marroni and Lauri-Lucente 37-64.

 

Le Faye, Deirdre. “Chronology of Jane Austen’s Life.” Copeland and McMaster xv-xxvi.

 

_____. “Jane Austen and Chawton House Library: A New Patron’s View.” Female Spectator 15.4 (2011): 8-9.

 

_____. “Jane Austen’s Smack.” Notes and Queries 58 (256).1 (2011): 77-79.

 

Leffel, John C. “‘Everything is Going to Sixes and Sevens’: Governing the Female Body (Politic) in Jane Austen’s Catharine, Or the Bower (1792).” Studies in the Novel 43.2 (2011): 131-51.

 

Lenckos, Elisabeth. “Johanna von Austen, ‘A Fatal Bluestocking from the Good Old Days’: Jane Austen, Madame de Staël, Annette von Droste-Hülshoff, and the Woman Artist.” Persuasions 33 (2011): 244-54.

 

Lindstrom, Eric. “Austen and Austin.” European Romantic Review 22.4 (2011): 501-20.

 

Marroni, Francesco. “Jane Austen’s Textualization of a Delusional World: Rhetorical Epistolarity and Verbal Miscalculation in Emma.” Marroni and Lauri-Lucente 13-36.

 

Marroni, Francesco, and Gloria Lauri-Lucente, eds. Jane Austen’s Emma: Revisitations and Critical Contexts. Roma: Aracne, 2011. Essays individually cited.

 

Mazzeno, Laurence W. Jane Austen: Two Centuries of Criticism. Rochester: Camden, 2011.

 

McMaster, Juliet. “Class.” Copeland and McMaster 111-26.

 

_____. “Good Punishes Bad? The Duels in Sense and Sensibility.” Persuasions On-Line 32.1 (2011). Web.

 

_____. “Speaking Fictions: The Genres of Talk in Sense and Sensibility.” Persuasions 33 (2011): 172-86.

 

Mead, Geoffrey. “Regency Brighton: An Alternative View.” Transactions 22 (2011): 29-31.

 

Mee, Jon. “Jane Austen and the Hazard of Conversation.” Conversable Worlds: Literature, Contention, and Community, 1762 to 1830. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2011. 201-38.

 

Meisel, David. “Seeing Stars for Jane’s Birthday.” Persuasions On-Line 32.1 (2011). Web.

 

Michaelson, Patricia Howell. “Woman’s Language; or, How to Speak like Mrs. Palmer (and Other Silly People).” Persuasions 33 (2011): 53-60.

 

Michie, Elsie B. “Frances Trollope’s One Fault and the Evolution of the Novel.” Women’s Writing 18.2 (2011): 167-81. This article positions Frances Trollope’s One Fault (1840) between Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice (1813) and Anthony Trollope’s He Knew He Was Right (1869).

 

_____. The Vulgar Question of Money: Heiresses, Materialism, and the Novel of Manners from Jane Austen to Henry James. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 2011. See especially ch. 1, “Social Distinction in Jane Austen” (26-64).

 

Moore, Roger E. “The Hidden History of Northanger Abbey: Jane Austen and the Dissolution of the Monasteries.” Religion and Literature 43.1 (2011): 55-80.

 

Morgan, Megan Stoner. “Pride and Potentiality: Doubling Elizabeth Bennet.” Persuasions On-Line 32.1 (2011). Web.

 

Mulvihill, James. “Lady Susan: Jane Austen’s Machiavellian Moment.” Studies in Romanticism 50.4 (2011): 619-37.

 

Nigro, Jeffrey A. “The Iconography of Sensibility.” Persuasions On-Line 32.1 (2011). Web.

 

Nixon, Lauren. Jane Austen: A Celebration of Her Life and Work. Introd. Josephine Ross. Contributions by John Wiltshire, Maggie Lane, Caroline Sanderson, and Josephine Ross. [Maidenhead, Berkshire]: Worth, 2011.

 

Nye, Eric W. “Absent Signifiers in Jane Austen: Toward an Archaeology of Morals.” Eighteenth-Century Life 35.3 (2011): 81-88.

 

O’Connell, Lisa. “Vicars and Squires: Religion and the Rise of the English Marriage Plot.” Eighteenth Century 52.3 (2011): 383-402.

 

Odeh, Adli. “Father Figures in the Novels of Jane Austen.” English Language Teaching 4.2 (2011): 35-45. Also on the Web: http://www.ccsenet.org/journal/index.php/elt/article/view/10762.

 

Olsen, Kirstin. “Bride-Cake and Apple Tarts: Cakes, Pies, and Other Sweets in the Time of Jane Austen.” [Los Angeles: Los Angeles Public Library], 2011. Video. Web. Culinary Historians of Southern California. http://chscsite.org/bride-cake-and-apple-tarts/.

 

Page, Norman. The Language of Jane Austen. 1972. London: Routledge, 2011. Routledge Revivals.

 

Palmer, Sally B. “Screens and Screening in Sense and Sensibility.” Persuasions 33 (2011): 154-65.

 

Parsons, Farnell. “Jane Austen and the Importance of Aunts.” JAS Report (2011): 26-31.

 

Penney, Christine. “Notes on Sales 2011.” JAS Report (2011): 172-77.

 

Phillips, Natalie. “Distraction as Liveliness of Mind: A Cognitive Approach to Characterization in Jane Austen.” Theory of Mind and Literature. Ed. Paula Leverage et al. West Lafayette: Purdue UP, 2011. 105-22.

 

Pimentel, A. Rose. “‘All the rational pleasures of an elegant society’: Re-examining Austen’s View of London.” Persuasions 33 (2011): 215-22.

 

Polack, Gillian. Five Historical Feasts: The Banquets of Conflux. [Culcairn, N.S.W.]: Eneit Press, 2011. See ch. 2: “Regency Gothic (Jane Austen).”

 

Potkay, Adam. “Narrative Possibilities of Happiness, Joy, and Unhappiness.” Nineteenth-Century Contexts 33.2 (2011): 111-25.

 

Primorac, Antonja. “Suvremene Adaptacije I Aproprijacije Lika I Djela Jane Austen.” Književna Smotra 43.3-4 [161-162] (2011): 47-57. Croatian journal.

 

Rader, Ralph Wilson. “From Richardson to Austen: ‘Johnson’s Rule’ and the Development of the Eighteenth-Century Novel of Moral Action.” 1984. Fact, Fiction, and Form: Selected Essays / Ralph W. Rader. Ed. James Phelan and David H. Richter. Columbus: Ohio State UP, 2011. 218-33.

 

Raff, Sarah. “Blame Austen: Janeites, Emma, and the Betrayal of Fanny Knight.” The Eighteenth-Century Novel. Vol. 8. Ed. Albert J. Rivero and George Justice. Brooklyn: AMS, 2011. 271-318.

 

Ramone, Jenni. “The Roles of the Storytellers: Richard and Judy Read The Jane Austen Book Club.” The Richard and Judy Book Club Reader: Popular Texts and the Practices of Reading. Ed. Jenni Ramone and Helen Cousins. Farnham [UK] / Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2011. 121-36.

 

Rawson, Claude. “Showing, Telling, and Money in Emma.” Essays in Criticism 61.4 (2011): 338-64.

 

Reef, Catherine. Jane Austen: A Life Revealed. New York: Clarion, 2011. A biography of Austen for young adults.

 

Reese, Garth D., Jr. “‘Her favourite moral writer’: Jane Austen’s Cowper.” Other People’s Books: Association Copies and the Stories They Tell. Introd. G. Thomas Tanselle. Chicago: Caxton Club, 2011. 72-74.

 

Richard, Jessica. “The Confidence Man: Persuasion and the Romance of Risk.” The Romance of Gambling in the Eighteenth-Century British Novel. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011. 146-68.

 

Ridout, Alice. “Lost In Austen: Adaptation and the Feminist Politics of Nostalgia.” Adaptation: The Journal of Literature on Screen Studies 4.1 (2011): 14-27.

 

Robson, Anita. “Godmersham Park Heritage Centre.” Austentations 11 (2011): 3-6.

 

Rockas, Leo. “When Did Darcy Fall in Love?” Persuasions 33 (2011): 195-201.

 

Rodgers, Lise. “Getting Dressed With Jane.” Sensibilities 42 (2011): 45-62.

 

Roston, Murray. “Austen, Emma.” The Comic Mode in English Literature: From the Middle Ages to Today. London: Continuum, 2011. 155-66.

 

Russell, Adam. “La Famille Elliot d’Isabelle de Montolieu, Première Traduction Française de Persuasion de Jane Austen.” New Zealand Journal of French Studies 32.1 (2011): 7-28.

 

_____. Isabelle de Montolieu Reads Jane Austen’s Fictional Minds: The First French Translations of Free Indirect Discourse from Jane Austen’s Persuasion. Bern: Lang, 2011.

 

Russell, Gillian. “Sociability.” Copeland and McMaster 176-91.

 

Russo, Michele. “Echoes of Emma’s Voice in America: M. Fuller and L. M. Alcott.” Marroni and Lauri-Lucente 279-300.

 

Sabor, Peter. “Good, Bad, and Ugly Letters in Sense and Sensibility.” Persuasions On-Line 32.1 (2011). Web.

 

Saggini, Francesca. “‘A smile at something unseen’: The Structuring Principle in Emma.” Marroni and Lauri-Lucente 93-132.

 

Sandrawich, Chris. “JASM: Autumn Tour to Worthing 7th-9th October 2011.” Transactions 22 (2011): 41-63. Also on the Web: http://janeausteninvermont.wordpress.com/2012/05/10/in-search-of-jane-austen-guest-post-a-tour-of-worthing-by-chris-sandrawich/.

 

Sasso, Eleonora. “Emma’s Afterlives: Austen, Atwood and McCullough.” Marroni and Lauri-Lucente 263-78.

 

Schlitz, Stephanie A. “Review of Jane Austen’s Fiction Manuscripts (Oxford University and King’s College London, 2010).” Journal of Victorian Culture 16.3 (2011): 426-31.

 

Schor, Hilary. “Emma, Interrupted: Speaking Jane Austen in Fiction and Film.” 2003. Film and Literature: An Introduction and Reader. 2nd ed. Ed. Timothy Corrigan. London: Routledge, 2011. 329-50.

 

Seeber, Barbara K. “‘Me, a tuneful Poet’: Jane Austen’s Verse.” Persuasions 33 (2011): 148-53.

 

Selwyn, David. “Jane Austen Studies, 2010 and 2011.” JAS Report (2011): 178-81.

 

_____. “Making a Living.” Copeland and McMaster 144-58.

 

Sense and Sensibility at 200.” JARW Jan.-Feb. 2011: 12-33. The History, The Relevance, The Romance, The Morality, and The Quiz, by various authors.

 

Silvers, Josh, and Toby D. Olsen. “Pride and Prejudice: Establishing Historical Connections among the Arts.” Conjuring the Real: The Role of Architecture in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Fiction. Ed. Rumiko Handa and James Potter. Lincoln: U of Nebraska P, 2011. 191-214.

 

Smith, Mavis. “Governesses and the 1812 Diary from Betley Hall.” Transactions 22 (2011): 5-21.

 

Smith, Peter W. H., and W. Aldridge. “Improving Authorship Attribution: Optimizing Burrows’ Delta Method.” Journal of Quantitative Linguistics 18.1 (2011): 63-88. A lexical approach comparing Austen to Charlotte and Emily Brontë.

 

Son, Younghee. [“Deviant Sensibility and Normality in Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice.”] Journal of English Language and Literature / Yǒngǒ Yǒngmunhak (JELL) 57.5 (2011): 839-70. In Korean with English summary.

 

Southam, Brian C. “Jane Austen beside the Seaside: Devonshire and Wales 1801–1803.” Persuasions 33 (2011): 125-47. Also on the web.

 

_____. “Kipling and Jane Austen: A Curious Match?” Kipling Journal 85.342 (2011): 5-17.

 

Spacks, Patricia Meyer. “A Civilized World.” On Rereading. Cambridge, MA: Belknap, Harvard UP, 2011. 54-84. This chapter is on re-reading Austen.

 

Spanos, William V. “Herman Melville’s Pierre; or, The Ambiguities and Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park: The Imperial Violence of the Novel of Manners.” Symploke 19.1 (2011): 191-230.

 

Spongberg, Mary. “Jane Austen and The History of England.” Journal of Women’s History 23.1 (2011): 56-80.

 

Stiller, Maureen. “Croydon.” JAS Report (2011): 161-66.

 

Stovel, Bruce. “Asking versus Telling: One Aspect of Jane Austen’s Idea of Conversation.” 2002. Stovel, Essays 95-116.

 

_____. “Comic Symmetry in Jane Austen’s Emma.” 1977. Stovel, Essays 145-61.

 

_____. “‘A Contrariety of Emotion’: Jane Austen’s Ambivalent Lovers in Pride and Prejudice.” 1987. Stovel, Essays 117-28.

 

_____. Jane Austen and Company: Collected Essays. Ed. Nora Foster Stovel. Introd. Juliet McMaster. Edmonton: Gutteridge / U of Alberta P, 2011. Austen-related essays are cited individually.

 

_____. “Jane Austen and the Pleasure Principle.” 2001. Stovel, Essays 75-94.

 

_____. “Once More, with Feeling: The Structure of Mansfield Park.” 2006. Stovel, Essays 129-44.

 

_____. “‘The Sentient Target of Death’: Jane Austen’s Prayers.” 1996. Stovel, Essays 163-80.

 

Stovel, Bruce, and Mary M. Chan. “Further Reading.” Copeland and McMaster 248-66.

 

Stovel, Nora Foster. “From Page to Screen: Emma Thompson’s Film Adaptation of Sense and Sensibility.” Persuasions On-Line 32.1 (2011). Web.

 

Stuart, Joseph T. “Time and Certainty: Jane Austen and Rene Descartes Have Tea.” New Oxford Review Dec. 2011: 38-39.

 

Sullivan, Margaret C. The Jane Austen Handbook: A Sensible Yet Elegant Guide to Her World. 2007. Philadelphia: Quirk, 2011.

 

Sutherland, John. “Jane Austen.” The Lives of the Novelists: A History of Fiction in 294 Lives. London: Profile, 2011. 57-59.

 

Sutherland, Kathryn. “Jane Austen on Screen.” Copeland and McMaster 215-31.

 

Sweeten, Paul. “Small Talk in Austen.” Persuasions 33 (2011): 187-94.

 

Tarpley, Joyce Kerr. “Playing with Genesis: Sonship, Liberty, and Primogeniture in Sense and Sensibility.” Persuasions 33 (2011): 89-102.

 

_____. “Sonship, Liberty, and Promise Keeping in Sense and Sensibility.” Renascence 63.4 (2011): 91-109.

 

Thaler, Joanna. “Plots and “Dark Subplots” in Sense and Sensibility: Adapting and Interpreting Jane Austen’s Duels.” Persuasions On-Line 32.1 (2011). Web.

 

Thomas, Bronwen. “What Is Fanfiction and Why Are People Saying Such Nice Things about It?” StoryWorlds: A Journal of Narrative Studies 3.1 (2011): 1-24. Discusses the fanfiction of Pride and Prejudice.

 

Thwaite, Alan. “Lunaticks, Boys’ Toys and Heroines.” JAS Report (2011): 64-75.

 

Todd, Janet. The Connell Guide to Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. London: Connell, 2011.

 

_____. “In Search of Mr. Darcy.” JAS Report (2011): 182-93.

 

_____. “‘Lady Susan,’ ‘The Watsons’ and ‘Sanditon.’” Copeland and McMaster 87-96.

 

Tóibín, Colm. “The Importance of Aunts (in the 19th-Century Novel).” London Review of Books 17 Mar. 2011: 13-19.

 

Townshend, Dale. “Improvement and Repair: Architecture, Romance and the Politics of Gothic, 1790–1817.” Literature Compass 8.10 (2011): 712-38. Begins with a discussion of Northanger Abbey.

 

Van Steenhuyse, Veerle. “Jane Austen Fan Fiction and the Situated Fantext: The Example of Pamela Aidan’s Fitzwilliam Darcy, Gentleman.” English Text Construction 4.2 (2011): 165-85.

 

Veisz, Elizabeth. “Writing the Eighteenth-Century Household: Leapor, Austen, and the Old Feudal Spirits.” Tulsa Studies in Women’s Literature 30.1 (2011): 71-91.

 

Verzella, Massimo. “A Matter of Degree: First Steps in a Corpus Stylistic Approach to Emma.” Marroni and Lauri-Lucente 231-44.

 

Villard, Léonie, and R. Brimley Johnson. Jane Austen: A French Appreciation. 1924. London: Routledge, 2011. Routledge Library Editions: Jane Austen.

 

Viveash, Chris. “‘Foul-Weather Jack’ and Jane Austen.” JAS Report (2011): 167-71.

 

_____. “Jane Austen’s Trinity Boys.” JAS Report (2011): 121-26.

 

Voss, Tony. “Sense and Sensibility: Celebration in Uncertainty.” Sensibilities 43 (2011): 32-46.

 

Wagner, Tamara S. “Foreign Fantasies and Genres in Bride and Prejudice: Jane Austen Re-Orientalizes British Bollywood.” Re-Orientalism and South Asian Identity Politics: The Oriental Other Within. Ed. Lisa Lau and Ana Cristina Mendes. London: Routledge, 2011. 103-23.

 

Wainwright, Valerie. “‘A disposition to think a little too well of herself’: A Psychological Approach to Emma.” Marroni and Lauri-Lucente 65-92.

 

Watson, Mary. “A Defense of Edward Ferrars: Austen’s Hero as a Nexus of Sense and Sensibility.” Persuasions On-Line 32.1 (2011). Web.

 

Webster, Jill. “Novels in Letters; Letters in Novels.” Austentations 11 (2011): 39-51. Also in JAS Report (2011): 144-52.

 

Wells, Juliette. Everybody’s Jane: Austen in the Popular Imagination. New York: Continuum, 2011.

 

West, Nancy, and Karen E. Laird. “Prequels, Sequels, and Pop Stars: Masterpiece and the New Culture of Classic Adaptation.” Literature/Film Quarterly 39.4 (2011): 306-36. A few references to Austen adaptations.

 

Whalen, Pamela. “A Sense and Sensibility for the 21st Century.” Sensibilities 43 (2011): 152-63.

 

White, Laura Mooneyham. Jane Austen’s Anglicanism. Farnham [UK] / Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2011.

 

Williamson, Ruth. “An Assessment of Sense and Sensibility, the Mini-Series of 1981.” Sensibilities 43 (2011): 107-29.

 

Wilson, Kim. Tea with Jane Austen. 2004. London: Frances Lincoln, 2011.

 

Wolf, Alan J. E. “Translation, Adaptation, Inscription: Displacing God in Austen’s Sense and Sensibility.” Meta: Journal des Traducteurs / Meta: Translators’ Journal 56.4 (2011): 861-77. Also on the Web: http://id.erudit.org/iderudit/1011257ar.

 

Woloch, Alex. “Character Insecurity in Sense and Sensibility.” Narrative Middles: Navigating the Nineteenth-Century British Novel. Ed. Caroline Levine and Mario Ortiz-Robles. Columbus: Ohio State UP, 2011. 25-47.

 

Woodworth, Megan A. Eighteenth-Century Women Writers and the Gentleman’s Liberation Movement: Independence, War, Masculinity, and the Novel, 1778-1818. Farnham [UK] / Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2011. British Literature in Context in the Long Eighteenth Century. See Part 3: “From Ennui to Meritocracy: Jane Austen, Maria Edgeworth, and the Redefinition of ‘Gentleman.’”

 

Xu, Jun. “Austen’s Fans and Fans’ Austen.” Journal of Literary Semantics 40.1 (2011): 81-97.

 

Zhang, Helong. “Jane Austen’s One Hundred Years in China.” Persuasions 33 (2011): 103-14.

 

Zhao, Hong. “A Relevance-Theoretic Approach to Verbal Irony: A Case Study of Ironic Utterances in Pride and Prejudice.” Journal of Pragmatics: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Language Studies 43.1 (2011): 175-82.

 

Zhuang, Xiuhua, and Juan Chen. “Self, Ideal and Salvation: A Comparative Study of Jane Austen’s Elizabeth and Cao Xuegin’s Lin Daiyu.” Journal of Language Teaching and Research 2.2 (2011): 420-23.

 

Zionkowski, Linda. “Emma and the Problem of Advice.” Persuasions 33 (2011): 223-37.

 

Zohn, Kristen Miller. “Tokens of Imperfect Affection: Portrait Miniatures and Hairwork in Sense and Sensibility.” Persuasions On-Line 32.1 (2011). Web.

 

Zunshine, Lisa. “What to Expect When You Pick up a Graphic Novel.” SubStance: A Review of Theory and Literary Criticism 40.1 [124]: 114-34. Discusses the Marvel Comics Pride and Prejudice adapted by Nancy Butler.

 

 

4. Selected Dissertations

 

Auyoung, Elaine. “Partial Cues and the Promise of More in Nineteenth-Century Realism.” Diss. Harvard U, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 3462430. Web. http://search.proquest.com/docview/876965111.

 

Bennett, Ashly Elisabeth Jensen. “For Shame: Emotion, Gender, and Innovation in the Nineteenth-Century British Novel.” Diss. Cornell U, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 3484799. Web. Discusses scenes of shame in works by Austen, Brontë, Thackeray, and George Du Maurier. http://search.proquest.com/docview/906287512.

 

Bentivoglio, Ashley Sara. “‘A Pretty-ish Bit of Wilderness’: Female Binaries and the Picturesque in the Novels of Jane Austen.” MA thesis. Villanova U, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 1502644. Web. http://search.proquest.com/docview/912022474.

 

Brennan, Susan Catherine. “Cinematic Adaptation and the Problem of Citizenship: Mapping Women’s Diasporic Authorship in a Post-9/11 World.” Diss. Ohio State U, 2010. DAIA 71.9 (2011): item DA3417856. Discusses Bride and Prejudice.

 

Broughton, Kimberly. “The Marriage Proposal in the Nineteenth-Century British Novel.” MA thesis. U of Alabama, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 1499746. Web. Discusses Austen, Brontë, and Dickens. http://search.proquest.com/docview/896627116.

 

Byler, Lauren. “And Everything Nice: Girls, Aggression, and the Nineteenth-Century British Novel.” Diss. Tufts U, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 3475069. Web. Discusses Austen, Dickens, Trollope, and Eliot. http://search.proquest.com/docview/899726803.

 

Cooper, Joan Garden. “Austen, Byron, and Scott: Domestic Virtues and Fashioning History—Britain 1805 through 1819.” Diss. U of Denver, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 3478279. Web. http://search.proquest.com/docview/902183168.

 

Craig, Heather Ann. “Dr. Johnson’s Novel Influence: Jane Austen Illuminates ‘Concordia Discors.’” MA thesis. Mississippi State U, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 1502715. Web. http://search.proquest.com/docview/912870340.

 

Crimmins, Jonathan. “Love, Liberty, and the Politics of Genre in the Romantic Novel.” Diss. U of Washington, 2010. DAIA 71.10 (2011): item DA3421745. Discusses Frankenstein, Emma, Waverley, and Mary Wollstonecraft and Rousseau.

 

DeYoung, Natalie Marie. “Men of Altered Sense and Sensibility in Two Film Adaptations.” MA thesis. California State U, Dominguez Hills, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 1499370. Web. http://search.proquest.com/docview/889269832.

 

Goodvin, Renee. “Reading Libraries: The Impact of Eighteenth-Century Bibliomania on Jane Austen’s Writing.” MA thesis. Sul Ross State U, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 1513825. Web. http://search.proquest.com/docview/1017862386.

 

Groce, Denise. “Jane Austen and the Ineffective Mother.” MA thesis. California State U, Dominguez Hills, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 1507398. Web. http://search.proquest.com/docview/916923418.

 

Gurton-Wachter, Lily. “Keeping Watch: Wartime Attention and the Poetics of Alarm Around 1800.” Diss. U of California, Berkeley, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 3473893. Web. The fourth chapter discusses the use of the Gothic in Godwin’s Caleb Williams and Austen’s Northanger Abbey. http://search.proquest.com/docview/896622096.

 

Harrison, Mickey. “Walking Toward Womanhood: The Maturation of Jane Austen’s Heroines in Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice.” MA thesis. California State U, Dominguez Hills, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 1496060. Web. http://search.proquest.com/docview/875289410.

 

Horowitz, Sarah M. “ Picturing Gender, Illustrating Plot Image/Text Interaction in the Fin de Siecle Illustrations of the Wig and Powder School.” MA thesis. Western Illinois U, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 1493810. Web. Discusses the Thomson (1894) and Brock (1895) illustrated editions of Pride and Prejudice, and the Thomson edition of Gaskell’s Cranford. http://search.proquest.com/docview/873444150.

 

Jamgochian, Amy Hope. “Tentative Futures: Ethics and Sexuality in the Nineteenth-Century Novel.” Diss. U of California, Berkeley, 2010. DAIA 71.9 (2011): item DA3413399.

 

Jones, Elizabeth. “Dancing through Life Symmetry and Balance within Dance and the Form of Jane Austen’s Novels.” MA thesis. Liberty U, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 1491433. Web. http://search.proquest.com/docview/865641991.

 

Landry, Noémie. “Interpreting Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice: One Story, Three Points of View.” [N.p.]: Lambert Academic, 2011.

 

Lee, Michael Parrish. “Eating and the Novel.” Diss. McGill U, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item NR74550. Web. The food plot vs. the marriage plot beginning with Austen. http://search.proquest.com/docview/886315167.

 

Min, Jayoung. “Novel Addiction: Consuming Popular Novels in Eighteenth-Century Britain.” Diss. Duke U, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 3490346. Web. http://search.proquest.com/docview/917671651.

 

Nadzam, Bonnie. “Uncertain Fictions: Fictional Forms Addressing Philosophical Uncertainty in the Enlightenment.” Diss. U of Southern California, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 3487982. Web. http://search.proquest.com/docview/914184798.

 

Phillips, Natalie. “Narrating Distraction: Problems of Focus in Eighteenth-Century Fiction, 1750-1820.” Diss. Stanford U, 2010. DAIA 71.12 (2011): DA3430507. Discusses Samuel Johnson in relation to Haywood’s The History of Miss Betsy Thoughtless, Sterne’s Tristram Shandy, and Austen’s Pride and Prejudice.

 

Pimentel, A. Rose. “‘The Divine Voice within Us’: The Reflective Tradition in the Novels of Jane Austen and George Eliot.” St Andrews, 2011. Web. http://research-repository.st-andrews.ac.uk/handle/10023/2583.

 

Poe, Emily. “Communities of Gossip in Late Eighteenth-Century Fiction.” MA thesis. Wake Forest U, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 1494591. Web. http://search.proquest.com/docview/874642584.

 

Sharren, Kandice. “‘A Creditable Establishment’: The Irony of Economics in Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park.” MA thesis. U of Victoria (Canada), 2011. ProQuest (2011): item MR82539. Web. http://search.proquest.com/docview/940892711.

 

Spooner, Emma. “Jane Austen: Second Impressions.” MA thesis. U of Calgary, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item MR81399. Web. http://search.proquest.com/docview/913006466.

 

Unruh, Sarah Elizabeth. “‘Something Fouler than the Earth’: Death and the Dying Body in British Romantic Literature.” Diss. Florida State U, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 3483617. Web. Discusses texts by Austen, Hazlitt, De Quincey, and Wordsworth. http://search.proquest.com/docview/902631686.

 

Voyles, Katherine Hardman. “Negotiations of Size and Scale in the Nineteenth-Century British Novel.” Diss. U of California, Irvine, 2010. DAIA 71.10 (2011): item DA3419912. Austen as compared to Hardy, Lewis Carroll, and Trollope.

 

Wadewitz, Adrianne. “‘Spare the Sympathy, Spoil the Child’: Sensibility, Selfhood, and the Maturing Reader, 1775-1815.” Diss. Indiana U, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 3466388. Web. An analysis of children’s literature of the late 18th century; it concludes with a discussion on how such childhood reading informed the reader’s understanding of Austen’s novels. http://search.proquest.com/docview/884792113.

 

Womick, Stephanie Robinson. “Fashioning Femininities: Sartorial Literacy in English Domestic Fiction, 1740-1853.” Diss. U of North Carolina, Greensboro, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 3457602. Web. Discusses Richardson’s Pamela, Austen’s Mansfield Park, Brontë’s Villette, and Thackeray’s Vanity Fair. http://search.proquest.com/docview/889026033.

 

Zerne, Lori Halvorsen. “Dwindling into a Wife: Women and the Culture of Marriage in Britain, 1760-1820.” Diss. West Virginia U, 2011. ProQuest (2011): item 3486699. Web. http://search.proquest.com/docview/910335103.

 

 

5. Popular Culture

 

Adams, Jennifer. Pride and Prejudice: A Counting Primer. Illus. Alison Oliver. Layton, UT: Gibbs Smith, 2011.

 

Aitken, Virginia. Mary Bennet’s Chance: The Sequel to Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. Brighton: Indepenpress, 2011.

 

Altman, Marsha. The Ballad of Grégoire Darcy: Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice Continues. Berkeley: Ulysses, 2011.

 

_____, ed. The Road to Pemberley: An Anthology of New Pride and Prejudice Stories. Berkeley: Ulysses, 2011.

 

Archer, Peter, and Jennifer Lawler. Bad Austen: The Worst Stories Jane Never Wrote. Avon, MA: Adams Media, 2011.

 

Ashford, Lindsay J. The Mysterious Death of Miss Austen. Aberystwyth: Honno, 2011.

 

Atlas, Nava. The Literary Ladies’ Guide to the Writing Life: Inspiration and Advice from Celebrated Women Authors Who Paved the Way. South Portland, ME: Sellers, 2011. Many references to Austen.

 

Austen, Jane. Pride and Prejudice in Pig Latin. Elmira, OR: JK Reading, 2011.

 

Barron, Stephanie. Jane and the Canterbury Tale. New York: Bantam, 2011.

 

Baxley, M. K. The Mistress’s Black Veil: A Pride and Prejudice Vagary. [Author]: Raven, 2011.

 

Becton, Jennifer. Caroline Bingley: A Continuation of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. [Author]: Whiteley, 2011.

 

Bennett, Stuart. The Perfect Visit. Northampton: Longbourn, 2011.

 

Berdoll, Linda. The Darcys: The Ruling Passion: Pride and Prejudice Continues. Austin: Well, There It Is, 2011.

 

Bloom, Annabella, and Jane Austen. Pride and Prejudice: The Wild and Wanton Edition. Avon, MA: Adams Media, 2011.

 

Butler, Nancy, adapt. Emma. By Jane Austen. Illus. Janet Lee. New York: Marvel Comics, 2011.

 

Cheshire, Simon. “Jane Austen.” You’ve Got to Read This: A Beginner’s Guide to Great Writers and the History of Books. Warwick: [Author], 2011. 88-91.

 

Cole, Barbara Tiller. Fitzwilliam Ebenezer Darcy: Pride and Prejudice Meets A Christmas Carol. [Author], 2011.

 

Collins, Rebecca Ann. Expectations of Happiness: A Companion Volume to Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility. Naperville: Sourcebooks, 2011.

 

Connelly, Victoria. A Weekend with Mr. Darcy. Naperville: Sourcebooks, 2011.

 

Corbett, C. P. Maid of Steele. [York]: Whitelocke, 2011. Short stories; “Maid of Steele” based on the character from Sense and Sensibility.

 

Cornthwaite, Barbara. George Knightley, Esquire: Lend Me Leave. [Author], 2011.

 

Darcy, Nivlem. The Impurgated Austen: Jane Austen’s Erotic Tales. [Author], 2011.

 

Davidson, Susanna, adapt. Pride and Prejudice. By Jane Austen. Illus. Simona Bursi. London: Usborne, 2011. Usborne Young Reading.

 

Dixon, P. O. He Taught Me to Hope: Darcy and the Young Knight’s Quest. [Author], 2011.

 

_____. Still a Young Man: Darcy Is in Love. [Author], 2011.

 

Doornebos, Karen. Definitely Not Mr. Darcy. New York: Berkley, 2011.

 

Edginton, Ian, adapt. Pride and Prejudice. By Jane Austen. Illus. Robert Deas. London: SelfMadeHero, 2011. Eye Classics. A graphic novel.

 

Enright, Dominique, comp. The Wicked Wit of Jane Austen. Rev. ed. 2002. London: Michael O’Mara, 2011.

 

Entertaining Miss Austen. Perf. Amanda Pitt, John Lofthouse, and David Owen Norris (piano).Watford, UK: Dutton Epoch, 2011. CD. The pieces recorded are drawn from seventeen music albums that belonged to Jane Austen and her female relations.

 

Eulberg, Elizabeth. Prom and Prejudice. New York: Point, 2011.

 

Farmer, Ava. Second Impressions: A Novel: In Two Volumes. Upperville, VA: Chawton House, 2011.

 

First Impressions: Original Broadway Cast, Based on Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. Adapt. Abe Burrows. Music and lyrics by Robert Goldman, Glenn Paxton, and George Weiss. Perf. Polly Bergen, Farley Granger, and Hermione Gingold. London: Flare Records, 2011. CD. Originally on Broadway in the 1958-59 season.

 

Ford, Michael Thomas. Jane Goes Batty: A Novel. New York: Ballantine, 2011.

 

From Prada to Nada. Screenplay by Fina Torres and Luis Alfaro. Dir. Angel Gracia. Perf. Camilla Belle, Alexa Vega, and Kuno Becker. Los Angeles: Odd Lot, 2011. DVD.

 

Grange, Amanda. Henry Tilney’s Diary. New York: Berkley, 2011.

 

_____. Wickham’s Diary. Naperville: Sourcebooks, 2011.

 

Hahn, Jan. An Arranged Marriage. Oysterville, WA: Meryton, 2011. A Pride and Prejudice re-telling.

 

_____. The Journey. Oysterville, WA: Meryton, 2011. A Pride and Prejudice variation.

 

Hamilton, Maria. Mr. Darcy and the Secret of Becoming a Gentleman. Naperville: Sourcebooks, 2011.

 

Hardy, Barbara. Dorothea’s Daughter and Other Nineteenth-Century Postscripts. Brighton: Victorian Secrets, 2011. Short Stories: See “Twilight in Mansfield Park” and “Mrs. Knightley’s Invitation.”

 

Harrison, Cora. Jane Austen Stole My Boyfriend. London: Macmillan, 2011.

 

Healy, Mark, adapt. Persuasion. By Jane Austen. London: Nick Hern, 2011, c2010. Adapted for the stage.

 

_____. Sense and Sensibility. By Jane Austen. London: Nick Hern, 2011, c2010. Adapted for the stage.

 

Hickes, Martin. “Jane Austen and the Facebook Phenomenon.” Notes from a Big County: Selected Journalism from Yorkshire. [Author], 2011. Originally published in The Guardian, Leeds 21 July 2010.

 

Hockensmith, Steve. Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dreadfully Ever After. Illus. Patrick Arrasmith. Philadelphia: Quirk, 2011.

 

Horozewski, Melissa. Austentatious Crochet: 36 Contemporary Designs from the World of Jane Austen. Philadelphia: Running, 2011.

 

Ivins, Holly. The Jane Austen Pocket Bible. N.p.: Crimson, 2011.

 

James, Jenni. Pride and Popularity: The Jane Austen Diaries. Brigham City, UT: Inkberry, 2011.

 

James, P. D. Death Comes to Pemberley. New York: Knopf, 2011.

 

Jane Austen: Classic BBC Radio Productions. North Kingstown, RI: AudioGO, 2011. This collection features four of Jane Austen’s classic novels (Emma, Mansfield Park, Northanger Abbey, Sense and Sensibility) performed by British actors.

 

Jane Austen Birthday Book. New York: Potter Style, 2011.

 

Jane Austen Knits. Loveland, CO: Interweave, 2011.

 

Jane Austen Piano Favorites. Perf. Martin Souter. Franklin, TN: Naxos of America, 2011. CD.

 

Jeffers, Regina. Christmas at Pemberley: A Pride and Prejudice Christmas Sequel. Berkeley: Ulysses, 2011.

 

Jones, Cindy S. My Jane Austen Summer: A Season in Mansfield Park. New York: HarperCollins, 2011.

 

Kelley, Nancy. His Good Opinion: A Mr. Darcy Novel. [Author]: Smokey Rose, 2011.

 

Kiely, Tracy. Murder Most Persuasive: A Mystery. New York: Minotaur, 2011.

 

Kerr, Meg. Experience. [Author]: Bluebell, 2011, c2010. A sequel to Pride and Prejudice.

 

Krull, Kathleen. “Jane Austen: Chocolate for Breakfast.” Lives of the Writers: Comedies, Tragedies (and What the Neighbors Thought). Illus. Kathryn Hewitt. 1994. Boston: Sandpiper, 2011. 24-27.

 

Lathan, Sharon. Miss Darcy Falls in Love. Naperville: Sourcebooks, 2011.

 

Louise, Kara. Only Mr. Darcy Will Do. Naperville: Sourcebooks, 2011.

 

Luscombe, Tim, adapt. Jane Austen’s Persuasion. London: Oberon, 2011. A play.

 

Mason-Milks, Susan. Mr. Darcy’s Proposal. Seattle: Grove Place, 2011.

 

Mohsin, Moni. Duty Free: A Novel. New York: Broadway, 2011. Emma, transported to 21st-century Lahore.

 

Mullany, Janet. Jane Austen: Blood Persuasion. New York: Morrow, 2011.

 

Myers, Amy. Murder in Abbot’s Folly. Surrey, UK: Severn, 2011. A murder mystery complete with a collection of Jane Austen’s lost letters.

 

Nattress, Laurel Ann, ed. Jane Austen Made Me Do It: Original Stories Inspired by Literature’s Most Astute Observer of the Human Heart. New York: Ballantine, 2011.

 

Odiwe, Jane. Mr. Darcy’s Secret. Naperville: Sourcebooks, 2011.

 

Parker, Paula K. Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility: The Stage Play. Tullahoma, TN: Wordcrafts Theatrical, 2011.

 

Pattillo, Beth. The Dashwood Sisters Tell All: A Modern-Day Novel of Jane Austen. New York: Guideposts, 2011.

 

Pinnock, Jonathan. Mrs. Darcy versus the Aliens. London: Proxima, 2011.

 

Pocket Posh Jane Austen: 100 Puzzles and Quizzes. Kansas City, MO: Andrews McMeel, 2011.

 

Reynolds, Abigail. Mr. Darcy’s Letter. Madison, WI: Intertidal, 2011.

 

_____. Mr. Darcy’s Undoing. Naperville: Sourcebooks, 2011. Rpt. of Without Reserve. 2007.

 

_____. What Would Mr. Darcy Do? Naperville: Sourcebooks, 2011.

 

Rigler, Laurie Viera. Rude Awakenings of a Jane Austen Addict. London: Bloomsbury, 2011.

 

Roberts, Belinda. Mr. Darcy Goes Overboard: A Tale of Tide and Prejudice. Naperville: Sourcebooks, 2011. Rpt. of Prawn and Prejudice. 2009.

 

Roberts, Michele, ed. Wooing Mr. Wickham: Stories Inspired by Jane Austen and Chawton House. Aberystwyth: Honno, 2011.

 

Robson, Lynne. The Journals of Thomas Bennet. [Author], 2011.

 

Sarath, Patrice. The Unexpected Miss Bennet. London: Hale, 2011.

 

Saunders, Kaitlin. A Modern Day Persuasion: An Adaptation of Jane Austen’s Classic. [Author]: Booksurge, 2011, c2010.

 

Scents and Sensibility. Screenplay by Jennifer Jan and Brittany Wiscombe. Dir. Brian Brough. Perf. Ashley Williams, Marla Sokoloff, Nick Zano, and Brad Johnson. Silver Peak Productions, 2011. Film.

 

Senseless Sensibilities: Create Your Own Austen-Tatious Mash-Up! Jane Austen Lit Libs. Text by Patrick Baker. Design by Danielle Deschenes. New York: Potter Style, 2011.

 

Simonsen, Mary Lydon. Becoming Elizabeth Darcy. [Author]: Quail Creek, 2011.

 

_____. Captain Wentworth Home From the Sea. [Author]: Quail Creek, 2011.

 

_____. Darcy on the Hudson: A Pride and Prejudice Re-imagining. [Author]: Quail Creek, 2011.

 

_____. For All the Wrong Reasons: A Pride and Prejudice Re-Imagining. [Author]: Quail Creek, 2011.

 

_____. Mr. Darcy’s Angel of Mercy: A Love Story from the Great War. [Author]: Quail Creek, 2011.

 

_____. Mr. Darcy’s Bite. Naperville: Sourcebooks, 2011.

 

_____. The Perfect Bride for Mr. Darcy. Naperville: Sourcebooks, 2011.

 

_____. A Walk in the Meadows of Rosings Park. [Author]: Quail Creek, 2011.

 

_____. A Wife for Mr. Darcy. Naperville: Sourcebooks, 2011.

 

Sotis, Wendi. Promises. [Author], 2011. A Pride and Prejudice variation.

 

St. Clair, Sophie. Mary King. Sequel to Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. [Author]: Inspirations, 2011. A graphic novel.

 

_____. Mary King. Sequel to Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. Part II. [Author]: Inspirations, 2011. A graphic novel.

 

Szereto, Mitzi. Pride and Prejudice: Hidden Lusts. Berkeley: Cleis, 2011.

 

Taylor, Nancy, adapt. Northanger Abbey. By Jane Austen. Harlow: Pearson, 2011.

 

Valby, Mary. The Quotable Sagittarius: Sagittarius Traits Described by Fellow Sagittarians. Gig Harbor, WA: Quotable Zodiac, 2011. A number of quotations from Jane Austen.

 

Waldock, Sarah J. Death of a Fop. [Author], 2011. Jane Churchill solves the murder of her husband Frank.

 

Wasylowski, Karen V. Darcy and Fitzwilliam: A Tale of a Gentleman and an Officer. Naperville: Sourcebooks, 2011.

 

Webb, Brenda J. Fitzwilliam Darcy: An Honourable Man. [Author], 2011.

 

Wegner, Ola. The Only Way: A Tale of Pride and Prejudice. [Author], 2011.

 

Wilson, Enid. Every Savage Can Reproduce: Pride and Prejudice-Inspired Science Fiction. [Author], 2011.

 

_____. My Darcy Vibrates . . . A Collection of Pride and Prejudice-Inspired Steamy Short Stories. [Author], 2011.

 

_____. The Spinster’s Vow. [Author], 2011.

 

Winslow, Shannon. The Darcys of Pemberley: The Continuing Story of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. [Author]: Heather Ridge Arts, 2011.

 

Woodbury, Katherine. A Man of Few Words, Being an Addendum to Pride and Prejudice as Told by Fitzwilliam Darcy to Jane Austen. 2nd ed. [Author]: Peaks Island, 2011.

 

 

Notes on the Jane Austen Bibliography, 2011:

 

1. Style: the bibliography follows the MLA 7th edition with this major exception:  the medium qualifier is added only for non-print titles (i.e., Web, Film, CD, DVD, etc.).  Alphabetization follows the NISO rules rather than MLA:  a blank space comes before a number or a letter in filing (e.g., Le Faye comes before Leal) rather than letter-by-letter order.


2. Cross-references are used for works in essay collections or anthologies to minimize repetition:  the citation refers to the author/editor and page numbers only, the full citation appears under the author or editor.


3. Annotations are included only for those entries where title alone is not self-explanatory.


4. Reprint editions: the past few years have seen an inordinate number of reprints of older editions, critical works, and biographies, as well as an increased number of books available electronically.  At this point Editor Susan Allen Ford and I agree that all cannot possibly be listed:  we will only see an increase in such works as the reprint publishers, POD suppliers, and ebook companies continue their efforts to make such works available.  I would just make note of this fact and encourage you to search online for older titles you might be looking for to see if they are available in these newer formats, and also alert you that what looks like a new work might actually be a reprint of an older work, and perhaps less expensive in its original edition.


5. Paperback reprints: these will be included in the annual bibliography only if published four or more years after the original edition.


6. US/UK publication: as a number of works are published in the US and the UK in different years, an effort will be made to include each publication in its publication year, with variations in titles noted.


6. Popular Culture: this category includes sequels, continuations, adaptations, films, merchandise, etc.  As there are a number of works that are self-published in this area, I have listed those that are readily available online that show a title and copyright page and an ISBN number.  Those titles having no place of publication or publisher noted are cited as “[Author], date.”


7. Kindle/ebooks: if a work is published only as an ebook, it will not be cited.  Exceptions will be decided on a case-by-case basis.


8. Book reviews: a review of a work on Jane Austen is generally not cited unless it is a substantive essay in its own right.


9. Austen Circle section: this section now contains works both by and about members of Austen’s circle (previous years include only works “by”).


I welcome any comments, suggestions, additions, or corrections.  Please email me at books@bygoneboosvermont.com or jasnavermont@gmail.com.

 

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