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 Family and Circle: original works/editions by and about Austen family members and friends
3. Austen Scholarship: biographical, critical, and interpretive works
4. Selected 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
Single Works
- Austen, Jane. Emma. Illustrations by Hugh Thomson. London: Macmillan Collector’s Library, 2023.
- _____. Emma. Introd. by Monica Feinberg Cohen. New York: Union Square, 2023. Signature Classics.
- _____. Emma. London; Nashville: Harper Muse, an imprint of HarperCollins, 2023. Jane Austen Collection.
- _____. Lady Susan. Newtown: Shepherd Moon, 2023.
- _____. Love and Freindship. Rpt. Introd. by G. K. Chesterton. London: Renard, 2023.
- _____. Mansfield Park. Introd. by Brian John Busby. London: Arcturus, 2023. The Classic Jane Austen Collection.
- _____. Mansfield Park. Jackson, WY: Sastrugi Press Classics, 2023. Large print edition.
- _____. Mansfield Park. London; Nashville: Harper Muse, an imprint of HarperCollins, 2023. Jane Austen Collection.
- _____. Northanger Abbey. Introd. by Brian John Busby. London: Arcturus, 2023. The Classic Jane Austen Collection.
- _____. Northanger Abbey. London, England; Nashville: Harper Muse, an imprint of HarperCollins, 2023. Jane Austen Collection.
- _____. Persuasion. Introd. by Brian John Busby. London: Arcturus, 2023. The Classic Jane Austen Collection.
- _____. Persuasion. London; Nashville: Harper Muse, an imprint of HarperCollins, 2023. Jane Austen Collection.
- _____. Persuasion. New York: Union Square, 2023. Signature Classics.
- _____. Pride and Prejudice. Illustrations by Hugh Thomson. London: Macmillan Collector’s Library, 2023.
- _____. Pride and Prejudice. Introd. by Brian John Busby. London: Arcturus, 2023. The Classic Jane Austen Collection.
- _____. Pride and Prejudice. London; Nashville: Harper Muse, an imprint of HarperCollins, 2023. Jane Austen Collection.
- _____. Pride and Prejudice. New Delhi: Fingerprint! Classics, an imprint of Prakash Books India, 2023.
- _____. Pride and Prejudice. New Delhi: Om SaiTech, 2023.
- _____. Pride and Prejudice. N.p.: Editions Samarkand, 2023.
- _____. Pride and Prejudice. Panaji, Goa, India: Qurate, 2023. Qurate Premium Editions.
- _____. Pride and Prejudice. Rye Brook, NY: Peter Pauper, 2023. Masterpiece Library Edition.
- _____. Sense and Sensibility. Illustrations by Hugh Thomson. London: Macmillan Collector’s Library, 2023.
- _____. Sense and Sensibility. Introd. by Brian John Busby. London: Arcturus, 2023. The Classic Jane Austen Collection.
- _____. Sense and Sensibility. London; Nashville: Harper Muse, an imprint of HarperCollins, 2023. Jane Austen Collection.
- _____. Sense and Sensibility. New York: Union Square, 2023. Signature Classics.
- _____. Sense and Sensibility. N.p.: Mint Editions, 2023. Large print edition.
Collected Works
- Alcott, Louisa May, Jane Austen, Honoré de Balzac, e. e. cummings. 100 Eternal Masterpieces of Literature. India: Grapevine India Publishers, 2023. Includes Emma and Pride and Prejudice.
- Austen, Jane. The Complete Jane Austen Collection. Vancouver: Royal Classics, 2023.
- _____. Jane Austen: Poems Both Inspiring and Witty from the Author of Pride and Prejudice and Emma. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2023. Great Poets Series.
- _____. Jane Austen’s The History of England: Writings from Her Youth. Ed. Allyson D’Antonio. Garden City, NY: Dover, 2023.
- _____. Sanditon and Other Stories. New Delhi: GenNext, 2023.
- Avery Jones, John. “Henry Austen: The Eventful Earlier Years as Receiver-General of Taxes for Oxfordshire.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- _____. “How Wealthy Were James and Jane Leigh Perrot?” JAS Report (2023): 55-60. A picture of the wealth of the Perrots, who made Austen’s nephew James Edward their primary heir.
- _____, Devoney Looser, and Peter Sabor. “Corrigendum Annual Report 2022.” JAS Report (2023): 148. An addendum to their essay on the documents of Cassandra Austen’s last years.
- Ballard, Mark. “The Austens' Residences in Sevenoaks. Part II: The Red House, Kippington House, and an Excursion to Lamberhurst.” JAS Report (2023): 78-92. A description of the homes of Austen’s ancestors.
- Barchas, Janine. “Cassandra and the Art of Copying.” JAS Report (2023): 42-54. Cassandra’s copies of art works.
- Batchelor, Jennie. “The Will of Susannah Sackree: A Life in Pieces.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Caddick, Marin. “Adela Knight’s Diaries.” JAS Report (2023): 93-101. Information from the diaries of the second wife of Austen’s nephew, Edward Knight.
- Emsley, Sarah, and Cheryl Kinney. “Tributes to Patrick Stokes.” JAS Report (2023): 11-12.
- Foster, Richard. “Jane Austen and Winchester College.” JAS Report (2023): 28-41. Describes the nephews who attended the College and other connections between Austen and the College, including a small cache of manuscripts and her residence at No. 8 College Street.
- Harris, Jocelyn. “A Lost Miniature of Jane Austen’s Aunt Philadelphia?” Sensibilities 66 (2023): 5-13. Presents evidence of a second miniature portrait of Philadelphia Hancock. Reprinted from JAS Report (2021): 19-24.
- Hussain, Azar. “The Boys at Steventon: Mr. Austen’s Students 1773-1796.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Kindred, Sheila Johnson. “Captain Charles Austen: Agent of British Diplomacy in South America.” JAS Report (2023): 102-10. The activities of Jane Austen's brother Charles on behalf of British diplomatic interests.
- Kindred, Sheila Johnson. “Lieutenant Commander Francis Austen RN.” JAS Report (2023): 6-8. Obituary of a direct descendent of Austen’s brother, Francis.
- Lane, Maggie. “Patrick Stokes.” JAS Report (2023): 9-11. Obituary of a descendant of Austen’s brother, Charles.
- Peterson, Lesley. “Things and Theatricality: James Austen’s Quest for Virtuous Drama.” Journal of Juvenilia Studies 5.1 (2023): 80-92. doi: 10.29173/jjs82.
- Abd-Rabbo, Muna, Ghadir Zalloum, and Ziad Nemrawi. “Decolonizing Imperialist Discourse in Jane Austen’s Persuasion: A Saidian Perspective.” Arab Studies Quarterly 45.3 (2023): 229-43. doi:10.13169/arabstudquar.45.3.0229.
- Abu-Manneh, Bashir. “Said’s Inflation of Empire.” Catalyst: A Journal of Theory and Strategy 7.3 (2023): 60-95. Discusses Mansfield Park.
- Ahn, Joyce. “Recent Criticism of Sense and Sensibility: An Overview.” Evans, Sense and Sensibility 28-47.
- Ailwood, Sarah. “Austen’s Men, Immortality and Intertextuality. Romanticism: The Journal of Romantic Culture and Criticism 29.2 (2023): 152-64. doi:10.3366/rom.2023.0596.
- Amoruso, Malika. “‘Not Every Single Man is Looking for a Wife’: Austen, Fordyce, and Fire Island.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Anderson, Melissa. “Propriety, Privacy, and Power in Sense and Sensibility.” Evans, Sense and Sensibility 146-60.
- Avery Jones, John, and Azar Hussain. “Marianne’s £2,000—‘I Am Sure I Am Not Extravagant in My Demands.’” Notes and Queries 70.3 (2023): 203-11. doi:10.1093/notesj/gjad053.
- Baicu, Constantin Dànuţ. “Lexical and Pragmatic Discrepancies in Retranslating Pride and Prejudice into Romanian. Case Study.” Linguaculture 14.2 (2023): 57-79. doi:10.47743/lincu-2023-2-0337.
- Bailey, Jordan. “Comparing and Contrasting Two Scenes from the 1995 and 2008 Films of Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility.” Evans, Sense and Sensibility 71-85.
- Baker, Christopher. “Jane Austen’s Colonel Brandon on the Screen.” Evans, Sense and Sensibility 193-206.
- Barrett, Amy. “Rendering Thought Thing-like: How Objects in Mansfield Park Inform Fanny’s Worldview.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Barron, Stephanie. “Investigating the Male Mystery: Austen’s Women as Private Detectives.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 48-56.
- Bautz, Annika. “‘Gentle Humour’ to ‘Savage Satire’: Austen Obituaries on Her Death, Its Centenary and Bicentenary.” Sinanan, Bautz, and Cook, Austen After 200 15-33.
- Beswick, Rachel. “Beware Seeking Adventures.” JARW 122 (2023): 34-35. Disasters that befall Austen heroines when they travel abroad at Easter.
- _____. “Dogs in Austen.” JARW 125 (2023): 36-37.
- _____. “Picnic Season.” JARW 123 (2023): 34-35. Austen’s associations with picnics.
- _____. “’Tis the Season to Recline.” JARW 126 (2023): 34-35. Christmas in Austen novels and adaptations.
- _____. “Weather the Weather.” JARW 121 (2023): 34-35. Austen’s characters on the weather.
- Biajoli, Maria Clara Pivato. “The Rocky Road to Translating Pride and Prejudice into Portuguese.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 138-47.
- Bodiat, Aneesa, and Antoinette Pretorius. “Jane Austen and Her Diverse Daughters: Muslim Women Re-Reading and Re-Writing Pride and Prejudice from South Africa and Beyond.” Current Writing: Text and Reception in Southern Africa 35.1 (2023): 2-12. doi:10.1080/1013929X.2023.2167400.
- Brodey, Inger S. B. “West of Austen.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Brown, Carolyn J., and Jason D. Solinger. “Teaching Austen in the Age of TikTok.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Browne, Christopher. “Jane Austen and Her Publishers.” JAS Report (2023): 111-25.
- _____. “Jane Austen and Her Publishers.” Sensibilities 67 (2023): 20-50. Similar to JAS Report (2023), with additional information about general publishing history and comparisons to Fanny Burney’s publishing history.
- Burke, Lauren, and Hannah K. Chapman. “Casting Mr Collins; or How a Zombie Film Returned Us to the Novel.” Sinanan, Bautz, and Cook, Austen After 200 187-207.
- Collins, Ellen. “An Emerald Enigma: The Symbolic Value of Ireland in Emma.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 219-29.
- Conway, Alison. “Conclusion: Mansfield Park Closes Its Gates.” Sacred Engagements: Interfaith Marriage, Religious Toleration, and the British Novel, 1750–1820. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 2023. 163-70.
- Cook, Daniel. “Jane Austen and Professional Fanfiction.” Sinanan, Bautz, and Cook, Austen After 200 35-57.
- Cowell, Benedict. “The Ultimate Elizabeth.” JARW 121 (2023): 52-53. Discusses the 1979 BBC adaptation of Pride and Prejudice.
- Cox, Brenda. “The Witty Clergyman.” JARW 126 (2023): 18-23. An exploration of Henry Tilney in Northanger Abbey.
- Cusack, Carole M. “Satire, Celebrity, and Politics in Jane Austen.” Literature and Aesthetics: The Journal of the Sydney Society of Literature and Aesthetics 33.1 (2023): 194-95.
- Dağoğlu, Tülay. “The Concept of Double Audience for Irony Based on the Theory of Binary Opposition in Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen.” Pamukkale University Journal of Social Sciences Institute / Pamukkale Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü Dergisi 56 (2023): 411-20. doi:10.30794/pausbed.1198265.
- Dale, Amelia. “Sanditon without a Summer.” Romanticism: The Journal of Romantic Culture and Criticism 29.2 (2023): 188-98. doi:10.3366/rom.2023.0599.
- _____. “Sense and Sensibility: Bodies and the Weather.” Sensibilities 67 (2023): 67-79.
- Darcy, Jane. “‘A Little Homestall.’” TLS: Times Literary Supplement 6286 (2023): 13. Discusses Jane Austen.
- Dashwood, Rita J. “Witches and Jedi Guardians: Jane Austen’s Portraits Then and Now.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Dashwood, Rita J., and Andrew McInnes. “Sadist, Land Shark, and Reptile: Autumn De Wilde's Emma.” Journal of Popular Culture 56.3/4 (2023): 456-77. doi:10.1111/jpcu.13194.
- Davidson, Hilary. Jane Austen’s Wardrobe. New Haven: Yale UP, 2023.
- Day, Felicity. “Real Women.” JARW 126 (2023): 44-48. Real women whose lives had parallels in Austen heroines.
- Diver, Gary W. “The Changing Times of Austen’s England.” Sensibilities 67 (2023): 120-43.
- Dooley, Gillian. “‘The Great Mrs. Churchill Was No More’: Death in Jane Austen’s Novels.” Romanticism: The Journal of Romantic Culture and Criticism 29.2 (2023): 143-51. doi:10.3366/rom.2023.0595.
- _____. “Wishing the Juvenilia Away: Jane Austen’s Advice to Caroline.” Journal of Juvenilia Studies 5.2 (2023): 125-35. doi: 10.29173/jjs81.
- Duncan, Kathryn. “The 1995 Film of Sense and Sensibility: A Survey of Reviews.” Evans, Sense and Sensibility 161-75.
- Dunford, Lizzie. “Darling Children: The Presence of Pride and Prejudice at Jane Austen’s House.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Evans, Robert C. “Biography of Jane Austen.” Evans, Sense and Sensibility xxxvii-xliv.
- _____. “Kate Hamill’s Dramatic Version of Sense and Sensibility: Its Conception, Design, and Reception.” Evans, Sense and Sensibility 228-42.
- _____. “Kate Hamill’s Dramatic Version of Sense and Sensibility: Multiple Responses to Major Productions.” Evans, Sense and Sensibility 243-62.
- _____. “The Real Jane Austen: A Praiseworthy Filmed Documentary.” Evans, Sense and Sensibility 207-27.
- _____. “‘Sense and Sensibility’ in Sense and Sensibility: The Use of a Key Phrase by Jane Austen’s Contemporaries and Its Relevance to Elinor.” Evans, Sense and Sensibility 89-108.
- _____. “The 2008 BBC Sense and Sensibility Miniseries: A Survey of Reviews.” Evans, Sense and Sensibility 176-92.
- _____, ed. Sense and Sensibility. Hackensack, NJ: Salem Press, 2023. Critical Insights. Essays are cited individually.
- Fagan, Joshua. “The Zaniness of the Marriage Plot in Pride and Prejudice.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 208-18.
- Falkiner, Suzanne. “A Plot that Jane Austen Herself Might Have Contrived: The Story of Rose Freycinet.” Sensibilities 66 (2023): 35-56. The historical story of an Englishwoman’s migration to Australia and its interconnections with Austen’s family and friends.
- Feder, Rachel. The Darcy Myth: Jane Austen, Literary Heartthrobs, and the Monsters They Taught Us to Love. Philadelphia: Quirk, 2023.
- Ferguson, Olivia. Caricature and Realism in the Romantic Novel. Cambridge: CUP, 2023. Chapter 4, “Jane Austen and Anti-caricature.”
- Fletcher-Crow, Donna. “Belfast Harp Festival.” JARW 121 (2023): 24-27. Austen’s use of the harp in her novels.
- _____. “A Country Village in London.” JARW 125 (2023): 38-45. London locations mentioned in Sense and Sensibility.
- Ford, Susan Allen. “The Heritage of Charles Bingley and Other Genealogies: The Children of the Abbey and Pride and Prejudice.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 68-80.
- Francus, Marilyn. “Why Austen, Not Burney? Tracing the Mechanisms of Reputation and Legacy.” ABO: Interactive Journal for Women in the Arts, 1640-1830 13.1 (2023). doi:10.5038/2157-7129.13.1.1328.
- Friedman, Emily C. “Austen among the Amateurs.” Sinanan, Bautz, and Cook, Austen After 200 59-80.
- Fullerton, Susannah. “The Many Duels of Sense and Sensibility.” Sensibilities 67 (2023): 93-105.
- _____. “Queen of the Regency.” JARW 124 (2023): 52-54. Austen’s influence on Georgette Heyer.
- García Soría, Cinthia. "Pride and Prejudice’s Popularity in the Spanish-Speaking World (1924-1994): Getting Stronger than Pride.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- _____. “The Reception—of Sense and Sensibility in Spanish-Language Editions.” Evans, Sense and Sensibility 263-78.
- García‐Carpintero, Manuel. “The Semantics of Fiction.” Mind and Language 38.2 (2023): 604-18. doi:10.1111/mila.12412. Uses Emma as an example.
- García-Periago, Rosa. “Traumatized by Jane Austen? Janeites and Austenites on Screen.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Gevlin, Rachel. “Jane Austen: Protofeminist, Postfeminist, Bad Feminist.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 148-59.
- Ghosh, Srijani. “Diversity Sells: Uzma Jalaluddin’s Muslim Adaptation of Pride and Prejudice.” English Studies: A Journal of English Language and Literature 104.3 (2023): 539-58. doi:10.1080/0013838X.2023.2180896.
- Gillard, Barry. “Jane Austen: Modernist.” Quadrant 67.10 (2023): 104-07.
- Greaney, Michael. “Austen and Death.” Essays in Criticism: A Quarterly Journal of Literary Criticism 73.4 (2023): 406-26. doi:10.1093/escrit/cgad034.
- Greenfield, Sayre N., and Linda V. Troost. “Pride and Prejudice Updates for a Multicultural America.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Grover, Danielle. “Jane Austen in Earnest.” JARW 124 (2023): 48-51. Traces of Austen in The Importance of Being Earnest.
- Gupta, Radhika. “Influencer of Estates: Women’s Reorientation of Patriarchal Estates in Jane Austen’s Novels.” Journal of Comparative Literature and Aesthetics 46.2 (2023): 113-20.
- Hall, Lynda. “Entail, Elopement, and Marriage Law in Pride and Prejudice.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Hanlon, Aaron R. “Sense and Sensibility as Social-Epistemic System.” Studies in the Novel 55.2 (2023): 131-47.
- Hemingway, Collins. “Adjudicating Wiltshire’s Readings of Mansfield Park.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- _____. “An Introduction to Jane Austen and Sense and Sensibility.” Evans, Sense and Sensibility xxi-xxxvi.
- _____. “The Monk and Mansfield Park.” JARW 125 (2023): 30-33.
- _____. “Northanger Abbey: The Bridge to Austen’s Mature Works—and More.” Sensibilities 66 (2023): 14-34. Reprinted from Persuasions On-Line 40.1 (2019).
- Hernandez-Knight, Bianca, and Kerry Sinanan. “Virtual Jane Con: An Interview with Bianca Hernandez-Knight.” Sinanan, Bautz, and Cook, Austen After 200 245-57.
- Herring, Jackie. “Take a Chair.” JARW 126 (2023): 2-11. The sedan chair in Bath and as used by Austen.
- _____. “Upper Rooms at Bath.” JARW 121 (2023): 16-21. Discussion of Austen’s use of the Assembly Rooms in Bath on the eve of a new restoration by the National Trust.
- Hiner, Amanda. “Mind over Matter: Memory Fiction from Daniel Defoe to Jane Austen.” Eighteenth-Century Fiction 35.1 (2023): 187-89. doi:10.3138/ecf.35.1.187.
- Hussain, Azar. “‘I Have Read the Corsair, Mended My Petticoat, & Have Nothing Else to Do’: Jane Austen and Lord Byron, a New Appraisal.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- _____. “Jane Austen’s Contemporaries.” JAS Report (2023): 61-77. A description of each of the ten living contemporaries Austen mentions in her novels.
- Jane Austen Society. News Letter. Nos. 60-61 (2023). Ed. Marion Davies.
- _____. Report for 2023. Ed. Hazel Jones. Essays are individually cited.
- Jane Austen Society (Kent Branch). Austentations 23 (2023). Ed. Paul Morris.
- Jane Austen Society (Midlands Branch). Transactions. No. 2023 publication.
- Jane Austen Society (Northern Branch). Impressions 70-72 (2023). Ed. Marilyn Joice.
- Jane Austen Society of Australia. JASA Chronicle (2023). Ed. Ruth Williamson.
- _____. Sensibilities 66-67 (2023). Ed. Joanna Penglase. Essays are individually cited.
- Jane Austen Society of North America. JASNA News 38.4, 39.1-3 (2023). Ed. Susan Wampler.
- _____. Persuasions: The Jane Austen Journal 45 (2023). Ed. Susan Allen Ford. Essays are individually cited.
- _____. Persuasions: The Jane Austen Journal On-Line 44.1 (2023). Ed. Susan Allen Ford. Essays are individually cited.
- Jane Austen’s Regency World [JARW] 121-126 (2023). Ed. Jackie Herring. Austen-related articles are individually cited.
- Johnson, Claudia L. “Austenescape, or, Taking Liberty.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 15-26.
- Johnson, Maureen. “Jane Austen’s Persuasion: Finding Companionate Marriage through Sickness and Health.” Humanities 12.5 (2023): 114. doi: 10.3390/h12050114.
- Jordan, Harriet. “‘Such Different Accounts of You’: Representations of Darcy on Screen.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Kelley, Joyce E., and McKenna Odom. “Sense and Sensibility and the Position of Women in the Romantic Era.” Evans, Sense and Sensibility 3-27.
- Kemmler, Fritz. “‘Pride’ in Byte and ‘Prejudice’ in Bits: A Medievalist’s Perspective on Jane Austen’s Novel.” Connotations: A Journal for Critical Debate 32 (2023): 39-67. doi: 10.25623/conn032-kemmler-1.
- Kenney, Theresa. “‘The Happiest, Wisest, Most Reasonable End’: Silence and the Sublime in Pride and Prejudice.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 127-37.
- Khan, Imdad Ullah, Saira Asghar Khan, and Saad Salman. “Wealth and Womanhood: A Feminist Marxist Reading of Property, Inheritance, and Class Mobility in Pride and Prejudice.” Women (1997-2032) 15 (2023): 65-78.
- Kinach, Larissa. “From Charlotte Smith to Jane Austen: The Evolution of the English Novel.” Zeitschrift für Anglistik und Amerikanistik: A Quarterly of Language, Literature and Culture 71.2 (2023): 145-57. doi:10.1515/zaa-2023-2015.
- Klein, Laura. “Pride and Prejudice and the Piano: Pianofortes and Music in Jane Austen’s Life and Work.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 102-12.
- Konerman-Sease, Jaime. “Responding to People in Pain with Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park.” Christian Bioethics: Non-Ecumenical Studies in Medical Morality 29.3 (2023): 207-20. doi:10.1093/cb/cbad018.
- Korneliusa, Kristīna. “The Level of Physicality in Jane Austen’s Major Novels, Their Film Adaptations and Her Private Letters.” B. A. S.: British and American Studies/Revista de Studii Britanice și Americane 29 (2023): 31-40. doi:10.35923/BAS.29.03.
- Kraege, Lisa. “‘The Ruins of the Face’: The Aesthetics of Ruin in Austen’s Persuasion.” Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies 46 (2023): 349-64.
- Krueger, Misty. “Virtual Sociability and the Online Austen Classroom.” Sinanan, Bautz, and Cook, Austen After 200 81-103.
- Lloyd, Rachel. “Super-mum or Villain.” JARW 124 (2023): 40-45. Examines the role of Mrs. Bennet in Pride and Prejudice.
- Looser, Devoney. “Linking Austen’s and Sterne’s Reception Journeys.” 1650-1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era 28 (2023): 23-43.
- _____. “Political Austen, Right and Left.” Romanticism: The Journal of Romantic Culture and Criticism 29.2 (2023): 177-87. doi:10.3366/rom.2023.0598.
- _____. “Uncovering Hidden Histories of Adapting Jane Austen.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 160-76.
- Lund, Katie. “Edward and Marianne: Rethinking the Dichotomy of Sense and Sensibility.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 188-96.
- Lynch, Deidre. “The Unwritten History of the Woman of Genius (Austen, Staël, Siddons): What She Says, Goes.” Romanticism: The Journal of Romantic Culture and Criticism 29.2 (2023): 165-76. doi:10.3366/rom.2023.0597.
- McCune, Adam F. “Adapting Austen: Turning Her Juvenilia into Plays.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 179-87.
- McMaster, Juliet. “Characters Characterizing: The Netherfield Chapters.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 27-34.
- Mahmoudi, Mariem, and Abdelkrim Chirig. “Exploring Politeness: Analysing the Arabic Translation in Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility.” International Journal of Linguistics and Translation Studies 4 (2023): 84-96.
- Malcolm, Gabrielle. “The Anatomy of a Novel: Emma.” JARW 122 (2023): 30-31.
- _____. “The Anatomy of a Novel: Mansfield Park.” JARW 121 (2023): 22-23.
- _____. “The Anatomy of a Novel: Persuasion.” JARW 123 (2023): 22-23.
- _____. “The Anatomy of a Novel: Sense and Sensibility.” JARW 124 (2023): 46-47.
- _____. “Austen on Screen.” JARW 126 (2023): 28-31. An analysis of the 1999 film adaptation of Mansfield Park.
- Manizza Roszak, Suzanne. “Laughing at Vampire Novels: Gothic Horror, Teen Girl Agency, and the Old and New Northanger Abbey.” Anglia: Zeitschrift für Englische Philologie/Journal of English Philology 141.4 (2023): 604-23. doi:10.1515/ang-2023-0035.
- Manning, Lona. “‘Held Up to Derision’: Mary Bennet and the Stereotype of the Female Pedant.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 91-101.
- Mercer, Anna. “‘Something to Say upon Women’s Inconstancy’: Fickleness and Fleeting Infatuation in the Shelleys and Beyond.” English Studies: A Journal of English Language and Literature 104.3 (2023): 460-77. doi:10.1080/0013838X.2023.2185998.
- Moore, Monika. “The Weather Is Dirty: Jane Austen’s Use of Nature as a Social Agent.” Interdisciplinary Literary Studies: A Journal of Criticism and Theory 25.4 (2023): 403-13. doi:10.5325/intelitestud.25.4.0403.
- Moore, Tara. “Droll Servants and Lasting Friendships: How de Wilde’s Emma. Updates Issues of Class.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Nachumi, Nora, and Stephanie Oppenheim. “Lady Susan and Love & Friendship: Laughter, Satire and the Impact of Form.” Sinanan, Bautz, and Cook, Austen After 200 209-24.
- Nixon, Lauren. “Austen Inspiration.” JARW 123 (2023): 44-46. Part One. Two literary influences on Austen: Frances Burney and Charlotte Smith.
- _____. “Austen Inspiration.” JARW 124 (2023): 24-27. Part Two. Two literary influences on Austen: Regina Maria Roche and Eliza Parsons.
- _____. “Austen Inspiration.” JARW 125 (2023): 16-18. Part Three. Two literary influences on Austen: Eleanor Sleath and Maria Edgeworth.
- _____. “The Mighty Enchantress.” JARW 122 (2023) 18-23. The life of Ann Radcliffe, Gothic novelist, and how she might have inspired Austen.
- Oswald, Ros. “Battle of the Sexes?” JARW 125 (2023): 48-53. A description of the Battle of Prague as “programme music” and why it was important to Austen and women of the period.
- Owen, David. “The Visible-Invisible Good Man in Jane Austen’s The Watsons.” Detoxing Masculinity in Anglophone Literature and Culture: In Search of Good Men. Ed. Sara Martín and M. Isabel Santaulària. Cham: Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan, 2023. 21-38.
- Paquin, Deborah. “Carriages as a Rhetorical Device in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Parisot, Eric. “Jane Austen, Mortal Immortal (and Other Contrarieties of Fame).” Romanticism: The Journal of Romantic Culture and Criticism 29.2 (2023): 109-19. doi:10.3366/rom.2023.0592.
- Parisot, Eric, and Gillian Dooley. Introduction. Romanticism: The Journal of Romantic Culture and Criticism 29.2 (2023): 107-08.
- _____, eds. Jane Austen, Mortal Immortal. Spec. issue of Romanticism: The Journal of Romantic Culture and Criticism 29.2 (2023): 107-210. doi:10.3366/rom.2023.0591. Essays are individually cited.
- Parry, Rosalind. “Joan Hassall and The Complete Novels of Jane Austen.” The Art of the Reprint: Nineteenth-Century Novels in Twentieth-Century Editions. Cambridge: CUP, 2023. 125-53. Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture 141.
- Pearson, Sara L., Claire Bellanti, and Robin Henry. “Jane Austen Bibliography, 2022.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Peterson, Lesley. “Writer’s Block, Roadblocks, Blockheads: Jane Austen’s Rocky Road to Acceptable Satire of the Clergy.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Petry, Yvonne. “Reversal of Fortunes: Daily Life and the Material Circumstances of the Dashwood Women.” Sensibilities 67 (2023): 106-19.
- Phillips, Tom. “What the Coachman Said: Servants and Servanthood in Mansfield Park.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Poulopoulos, Panagiotis. The Erard Grecian Harp in Regency England. London: Boydell, 2023. Chapter on the harp’s literary footprint from Pride and Prejudice on.
- Raff, Sarah. “Wearing Austen.” Sinanan, Bautz, and Cook, Austen After 200 105-25.
- Rands, Elizabeth Gilliland. “Gossip, Girl: The Power of Rumor in Pride and Prejudice.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Readioff, Corrina. “Jane Austen and the King of Skiffle.” History Today 73.1 (2023): 22-24. Discusses the song “The Irishman” as part of Austen’s songbook.
- Rendell, Mike. “The Great Belzoni.” JARW 123 (2023): 24-27. A description of the career of the man who helped bring the Egyptian craze to England, and notes of Jane Austen’s possible connections.
- _____. “Jane Austen in Spectacles.” JARW 126 (2023): 50-53. Reading glasses and other optical lenses possibly used by Austen.
- Rethorst, John. Why Teaching Art is Teaching Ethics. New York: Springer, 2023. Chapter on Aristotle and Jane Austen.
- Reynolds, Diana. “‘I Am Not Helpless’: Miss Bates as the Hidden Queen of Highbury.” Sensibilities 66 (2023): 91-101. Reprinted from Persuasions 43 (2021).
- Rishel, Mary Ann. “For Better or for Worse: A Marriage of Humor and Comedy.” Teaching Comedy. Ed. Bev Hogue. New York: MLA, 2023. 141-49. Options for Teaching 61. Discusses Pride and Prejudice.
- Roome, Dana Reynolds. “Are They All Horrid?” JARW 123 (2023): 48-53. The life of Francis Lathom, author of one of the Gothic novels Austen used in Northanger Abbey.
- Rowney, Matthew. “Yam Grounds and Sugar Time: A Contrapuntal Reading of Mansfield Park.” Studies in Romanticism 62.1 (2023): 55-76. doi:10.1353/srm.2023.0006.
- Rytting, Jenny Rebecca. “A Rock-Solid Foundation: Building Personal Construct Systems in Pride and Prejudice.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 35-47.
- Sabor, Peter. “Jane Austen’s False Friends: Isabella Thorpe, her Precursors and her Successors.” Sensibilities 67 (2023): 51-65.
- Schneeberger, Brandon. “‘No, Sir; We Had Talk Enough, but No Conversation’: Idle Talk in Sense and Sensibility.” Evans, Sense and Sensibility 128-45.
- Shen, Zhongliang. “Kindness and Sympathy in Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility.” Explicator 81.3-4 (2023): 105-09. doi:10.1080/00144940.2024.2327445.
- Simpson, Kim. “Chawton House and Its Library: Legacies and Futures.” ABO: Interactive Journal for Women in the Arts, 1640-1830 13.1 (2023). doi:10.5038/2157-7129.13.1.1334.
- Sinanan, Kerry. “Mr. Darcy, Jane Austen’s Imperial Man of Feeling.” Sinanan, Bautz, and Cook, Austen After 200 127-55.
- Sinanan, Kerry, Annika Bautz, and Daniel Cook, eds. Austen After 200: New Reading Spaces. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan, 2023. Essays are cited individually.
- _____. Introduction. Sinanan, Bautz, and Cook, Austen After 200 1-14.
- Smilie, Ethan K. “Literature, Gossip, and Eavesdropping: Boethian Consolation in Jane Austen’s Persuasion.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 245-55.
- Spongberg, Mary. “Jane Austen (1775-1817).” History from Loss. Ed. Marnie Hughes-Warrington and Daniel Woolf. New York: Routledge, 2023. 142-48.
- Stiller, Maureen. “Austen’s Steventon Home.” JARW 121 (2023): 54-55. A report on the archaeological dig of the Steventon Rectory.
- _____. “Constantia’s Healing Powers.” JARW 122 (2023): 54-55. A description of the sweet wine from South Africa that soothed Elinor Dashwood.
- Stove, Judith. “A Scandalous Diary: The Grand Tours of Anna Jameson.” Sensibilities 67 (2023): 5-19. The life and writings of an Austen contemporary female writer with echoes of Austen’s life and writings.
- Sullivan, Margaret C. “Blog Softly and Carry a Big Cluebat.” Sinanan, Bautz, and Cook, Austen After 200 225-44.
- Sundet, Leta. “Emma’s Snowstorm: Crisis and Character in Miniature.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 238-44.
- Sutherland, Kathryn. “On Looking into Chapman’s Austen: 100 Years On.” Review of English Studies 74.313 (2023): 150-67. doi:10.1093/res/hgac083.
- Taaffe, Benjamin. “Jane Austen in the Classroom.” Sensibilities 66 (2023): 57-74.
- Taylor, Anya. “Romantic Energy.” Wordsworth Circle 54 (2023): 250-70. doi:10.1086/725331. Discusses Persuasion.
- Thompson, Allison. “Jane Austen, DragonRider; Pride and Prejudice in Fantasy Fan Fiction.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Thompson, Peggy. “The Promise and Problem of Habit in Austen’s Mansfield Park.” Eighteenth-Century Life 47.3 (2023): 1-29. doi:10.1215/00982601-10690067.
- Todd, Janet. “‘I Believe I Must Date It from My First Seeing His Beautiful Grounds at Pemberley.’” Persuasions 45 (2023): 57-67.
- _____. “‘I Meant to be Uncommonly Clever’: Elizabeth Bennet and Emma Woodhouse.” JAS Report (2023): 138-47.
- Tredell, Nicolas. “Self-Command and Selfishness: Civility and Wildness in Sense and Sensibility.” Evans, Sense and Sensibility 109-27.
- Tuite, Clara. “Precarious Austen: A Shabby Genteel Story.” Romanticism: The Journal of Romantic Culture and Criticism 29.2 (2023): 120-32. doi:10.3366/rom.2023.0593.
- Valero Redondo, María. “‘Craving to Be Frightened’: Henry James’s The Turn of the Screw as a Sinister Parody of Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey.” Miscelánea: A Journal of English and American Studies 67 (2023): 71-90. doi:10.26754/ojs_misc/mj.20236417.
- _____. “‘Undiverted Hearts’: Domestic Alienation and Moral Integrity in Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park and Henry James’s Washington Square / ‘Corazones Leales’: Alienación Doméstica E Integridad Moral En Mansfield Park, De Jane Austen Y Washington Square, De Henry James.” ES Review: Spanish Journal of English Studies 44 (2023): 237-59. doi:10.24197/ersjes.44.2023.237-259.
- Valihora, Karen. “Emma Pastoral.” Review of English Studies 74.315 (2023): 518-31. doi:10.1093/res/hgac090.
- Vidor, Constance. “‘Such a Good Piece of Fun’: The Cross-Dressed Man and the Drama of Ridicule.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 81-90.
- Volz, Jessica A. “Becoming Elizabeth.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 197-207.
- Wassif, Mariam. “Emma, Empire, and the Classics.” Sinanan, Bautz, and Cook, Austen After 200 157-85.
- Wells, Juliette. A New Jane Austen: How Americans Brought Us the World’s Greatest Novelist. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2023.
- _____. “Pride and Prejudice through American Eyes.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Wells, Laura. “The Road to Meryton.” JARW 125 (2023): 24-29.
- Whalan, Pamela. “Persuasion: A World Built on Crumbling Foundations.” Sensibilities 66 (2023): 75-90.
- _____. “The Power of the Purse Strings.” Sensibilities 67 (2023): 80-92. Money in Sense and Sensibility.
- Wilkes, Joanne. Unfinished Austen: Interpreting Catharine, Lady Susan, The Watsons, and Sanditon. New York: Anthem, 2023.
- Wilkes, Sue. “Muslins and Mule-Spinning.” JARW 121 (2023): 38-41. Cotton production with the industrial revolution and its relationship with Austen.
- _____. “Our Wedgwood Ware.” JARW 123 (2023): 36-41. The production of Staffordshire pottery and how it is related to Austen.
- _____. “The Prettiest English China.” JARW 124 (2023): 20-23. The porcelain industry and how it is related to Austen.
- _____. “Soft as Silk.” JARW 125 (2023): 4-7. The silk industry and how it is related to Austen, featuring the oak-leaf silk pelisse.
- _____. “Trouble Looming.” JARW 126 (2023): 24-26. The power loom and how it is related to Austen.
- _____. “‘We Walked by the Canal.’” JARW 122 (2023): 36-41. A description of the importance of the canal to the English Industrial Revolution and Austen family’s experiences with canals.
- Wiltshire, John. “Family Resemblance: Displacement and Loss in Jane Austen’s Novels.” Romanticism: The Journal of Romantic Culture and Criticism 29.2 (2023): 133-42. doi:10.3366/rom.2023.0594.
- Wong, Edwin. “Green with Envy: The Story of Money in Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility.” Evans, Sense and Sensibility 48-70.
- Yahav, Amit S. “In Praise of Idling: Johnson, Austen, and Literary Leisure.” Modern Language Quarterly: A Journal of Literary History 84.1 (2023): 1-25. doi:10.1215/00267929-10189270.
- Yang, Lorraine. “Revisiting the Controversy of Mansfield Park: Undermining Fanny Price and Repudiating Didactic Writing.” Persuasions On-Line 44.1 (2023).
- Yelland, Cris. “Stylistic Change and Theory of Mind in Emma.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 230-37.
- Zohn, Kristen Miller. “With Such a Smile over the Face: Reading Darcy’s Portrait.” Persuasions 45 (2023): 113-26.
- Barnett, Carson Leah. “Umbrellas Hanging by the Door: Jane Austen and Social Ecology.” MA Thesis. U South Alabama, 2023.
- Bennett, Kerri L. “Austentatious Aspirations: How Janeite Women Writers Create and Expand Their Own Cultural Communities through Recounting and Adapting Jane Austen’s Original Works in Literature and Film.” Diss. Arkansas State U, 2023.
- Cline, Lauren Eriks. “Spectator Narratives: Print Representations of Performance and Nineteenth-Century Audiences.” Diss. U Michigan, 2023. Discusses Mansfield Park.
- Derrick, Keith H. “‘Relations in the Unseen’: An Asexual Reading of Long Nineteenth-Century British Literature.” Diss. Georgia State U, 2023. Contains a section on Emma.
- Ferraro, Michael. “‘The Body of the Church Is a Mass of Fragments’: The Protestant Invisible Church and Remnant Catholicism in Eighteenth-Century British Prose Fiction.” Diss. Ohio U, 2023. Discusses Mansfield Park.
- Gavlik, Jayde K. “Walking beyond Boundaries: Jane Austen’s Depiction of Female Agency and Peripatetic Freedom in Pride and Prejudice.” MA Thesis. Cleveland State U, 2023.
- Giordano, Abigail Elizabeth. “What We Were: Romantic-Era Narratives of the Aging, Disabled Woman.” MA Thesis. College of Charleston, 2023.
- Goodenberger, Elena. “‘Henrietta and Harriet’: Considering the Marginalized Best Friend in Burney’s Cecilia and Austen’s Emma.” MA Thesis. Chapman U, 2023.
- Hawley-Sibbett, Ruby Ellen. “Wales, the West Country, and the Midlands in Female-authored Novels, 1810-1820.” Diss. U Nottingham, 2023.
- Hodgson, Laura. “‘He is a Gentleman. I Am a Gentleman’s Daughter. So Far We Are Equal’: Gender Performance in Twenty-First Century Adaptations of Jane Austen’s Emma and Pride and Prejudice.” MA Thesis. U Waikato, 2023.
- Karnap, Claire Beth. “Sensibility and Women’s Well-Being in British Literature of the Long Eighteenth Century.” Diss. U Florida, 2023. Ch. 4 is on Sense and Sensibility.
- Keener, Jennifer. “Proper and Improper Pride in the Novels of Samuel Richardson and Jane Austen.” MA Thesis. Cleveland State U, 2023.
- Kelsey, Elizabeth Anne. “‘It Has Already Exposed You to Some Very Impertinent Remarks’: Intertextual Regulation of Women from the Early British Novel to the Twenty-First Century Screen.” Diss. U Missouri—Kansas City, 2023.
- Kohls, Kathryn M. “From Jane Austen to Meghan Markle: The Persistence of British Imperialism in White Popular Feminism.” Diss. U Kentucky, 2023.
- Naqashbandi, Bushra. “Gender Equality in Selected Novels of Jane Austen: Coping with Anxiety to Redefine Home and Gender Roles.” Diss. U Nottingham, 2023.
- Peña, Mary Clare Killeen. “Airs, Waters, Places: The English Ecosystem in Jane Austen’s Emma.” MA Thesis. California State U—Bakersfield, 2023.
- Sausa, Alexandra. “Neurodiversity in Sense and Sensibility and Emma: Jane Austen’s Heroines and Their Cognitive Difference.” MA Thesis. U Tennessee, 2023.
- Turner, Calabria D. “Sound, Subjectivity, and Feminism: Victorian Novels and Their Twentieth- and Twenty-First-Century Adaptations.” Diss. Georgia State U, 2023. Discusses Northanger Abbey.
- Turner, Sara A. “The Significance of Maintaining Character Integrity in Literary Retellings.” MA Thesis. Chapman U, 2023. Focuses on Pride and Prejudice.
- Van Cleave, Sarah. “Misreading Maps: Maps and the British Novel in the Age of the Ordnance Survey.” U Michigan, 2023. Discusses Mansfield Park.
- Assaf, Andrea Kirk. Jane Austen’s Little Book of Wisdom: Words on Love, Life, Society, and Wisdom. London: HarperCollins, 2023.
- Barron, Stephanie. Jane and the Final Mystery. New York: Soho Crime, 2023.
- Bastin, Marjolein. The Jane Austen Escape Room Book. Kansas City, MO: Andrews McMeel, 2023.
- Bellezza, Audrey, and Emily Harding. Emma of 83rd Street. New York: Gallery Books, 2023.
- Bullamore, Tim. “Lady Susan Is Dead.” JARW 122 (2023): 44-49. An imaginary obituary for Lady Susan, as it might read today.
- Bradley, Carol Pratt. The Making of Margaret Dashwood. Salt Lake City: WiDo, 2023.
- Collins, Anne. Persuasion. London: Penguin, 2023. Penguin readers. A retelling for children.
- Jalaluddin, Uzma. Much Ado about Nada. Toronto: Penguin Random House, 2023. A modern retelling of Persuasion.
- Jane Austen: A Literary Card Game. London: Hachette, 2023.
- Jones, Amelia. The Stage Kiss. New York: Alcove, 2023. Related to Pride and Prejudice.
- Kotugno, Katie. Meet the Benedettos. New York: Harper, 2023. Related to Pride and Prejudice.
- Lane, Carly. A Regency Guide to Modern Life: 1800s Advice on 21st Century Love, Friends, Fun and More. New York: DK, 2023.
- Lippincott, Rachael. Pride and Prejudice and Pittsburgh. New York: Simon and Schuster, 2023.
- Makowski, Sarah J. Bitches in Bonnets: Life Lessons from Jane Austen’s Mean Girls. Guildford, CT: Prometheus, 2023.
- McVeigh, Alice. Darcy: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. London: Warleigh Hall, 2023.
- Mann, Rachel. A Truth Universally Acknowledged: 40 Days with Jane Austen. London: Canterbury, 2023.
- Quain, Amanda. Ghosted: A Northanger Abbey Novel. New York: Wednesday, 2023.
- Peterson, J. C. Lola at Last. New York: Harper Teen, 2023. A modern take on Lydia Bennet.
- Price, Tirzah. Manslaughter Park. New York: Harper Teen, 2023.
- Reynolds, Abigail. Spellbound at Pemberley: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. N.p.: White Soup, 2023.
- Rosen, L. C. Emmett. New York: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, 2023. A retelling of Emma.
- Saunders, Eric. Jane Austen Wordsearch: Puzzles Inspired by the Classic Novels. London: Arcturus, 2023.
- Stockton, Kasey. I’m Not Charlotte Lucas: A Novel. American Fork, UT: Covenant, 2023.
- Taub, Melinda. The Scandalous Confessions of Lydia Bennet, Witch. New York: Grand Central, 2023.
- Terciero, Rey. Northranger. New York: Harper Alley, 2023. Graphic novel related to Northanger Abbey.
- Thelander, Martin. Jane Austen: Pride and Prejudice Map. Stockholm: Paris Grafik, 2023.
- Verant, M. Emma’s Dragon: London and Pemberley. N.p.: Acerbic, 2023.
- Young, Justin, screenwriter. Sanditon. Season Three. Dir. by Jennie Paddon and Steve Brett. Arlington, VA: PBS Distribution, 2023. [DVD, BluRay]
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, Ebook, 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. We 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. Make note of this fact, and search online for older titles you might be looking for to see if they are available in these newer formats, keeping in mind 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 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.
7. Popular Culture: this category includes sequels, continuations, mash-ups, adaptations, films, merchandise, etc. This list is selective; as there are a number of works that are self-published in this area, we have listed only those that are catalogued on WorldCat.
8. 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.
9. Book reviews: a review of a work on Jane Austen is generally not cited unless it is a substantive essay in its own right.
10. Dissertations: Please be aware that some dissertations listed here are under embargo for a set period of time before they will be made publicly available.
11. Language: Although Austen scholarship is published in many languages, this bibliography is representative only of works originally published in English.