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Jane Austen Bibliography, 2024

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 selective, rather than exhaustive, list of works that focus completely or in part on Austen

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

Explanatory notes are at the end of the bibliography.

1. Austen Editions

Single Works
  • Austen, Jane. Catharine, or the Bower, with The Beautiful Cassandra. London: Renard, 2024.
  • _____. Emma. Bath: North Parade, 2024. Bath Classics.
  • _____. Lesley Castle: An Unfinished Novel in Letters. London: Renard, 2024.
  • _____. Love and Freindship. Ed. Juliet McMaster et al. Sydney: Juvenilia Press, 2024.
  • _____. Mansfield Park. London: Macmillan, 2024. Macmillan Collector’s Library.
  • _____. Mansfield Park. New York: Union Square, 2024. Signature Classics.
  • _____. Northanger Abbey. New York: Union Square, 2024. Signature Classics.
  • _____. Pride and Prejudice. Bath: North Parade, 2024. Bath Classics.
  • _____. Pride and Prejudice. Illus. Anna Bond. New York: Penguin, 2024. Puffin in Bloom.
  • _____. Pride and Prejudice. Introd. Malorie Blackman. Oxford: OUP, 2024. Oxford Children’s Classics.
  • _____. Pride and Prejudice. London: Sirius, 2024. Arcturus Decorative Classics.
  • _____. Pride and Prejudice. New York: Harper Muse, 2024. Artisan Edition.
  • _____. Pride and Prejudice. New York: Union Square, 2024. Signature Classics.
  • _____. Pride and Prejudice. Ware: Wordsworth Editions, 2024. Heritage Collection.
  • _____. Pride and Prejudice: English Edition. Munich: Anaconda, 2024.
  • _____. Sanditon. Ware: Wordsworth Editions, 2024. Classics.
  • _____. Sense and Sensibility. Illus. Anna Bond. New York: Penguin, 2024. Puffin in Bloom.
  • _____. Sense and Sensibility. N.p.: Editions Samarkand, 2024. Large print.
  • Hershinow, Stephanie Insley, ed. Sense and Sensibility. By Jane Austen. New York: Norton, 2024. Norton Library Edition.
  • Keymer, Thomas, ed. Northanger Abbey. By Jane Austen. Oxford: OUP, 2024. Oxford World’s Classics.
Collected Works
  • _____. Complete Novels of Jane Austen. Ware: Wordsworth Editions, 2024. Wordsworth Library Collection.
  • _____. The Jane Austen Gift Set: A Puffin in Bloom 3 Book Collection: Pride and Prejudice, Emma, and Sense and Sensibility. New York: Penguin, 2024.

2. Austen Family and Circle

  • Amy, Helen. Jane Austen’s Men. Stroud: Amberley, 2024.
  • Avery Jones, John. “Henry Austen and the Agreement for Brokerage of Army Commissions.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • _____. “‘The Tremendous Law-suit’ against Edward Austen Knight.” JAS Report (2024): 58–72.
  • Avery Jones, John, Devoney Looser, and Peter Sabor. “Cassandra Austen’s Last Years and Wishes, with Transcriptions.” Sensibilities 68 (2024): 57–78. A reprint of JAS Report (2022): 33–55.
  • Ball, Diane Jane. “House Hunting in Bath.” JARW 131 (2024): 48–51. The Austens’ search for a home in Bath.
  • Barchas, Janine. “More about Cassandra and the Art of Copying.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • Caddick, Martin. “Edward Austen’s Inheritance—Not as Rich as We Thought.” JAS Report (2024): 49–57.
  • Cornick, Nicola. “‘The Cruel Mrs. Craven’: A New Assessment of the Historical Character behind an Austen Family Myth.” JAS Report (2024): 29–43.
  • Dunning, Ronald. “George Austen’s Maternal Ancestry.” JAS Report (2024): 73–80.
  • Harris, Jocelyn. “The Lost Miniature of Captain Francis Austen (1806).” Sensibilities 68 (2024): 17–40.
  • Hurst, Jane. “The Gray Family and Alton.” JAS Report (2024): 81–86.
  • Hussain, Azar. “New Light on Jane Austen’s Great-Grandmother: A Complete Transcript of Elizabeth Weller’s Memorandum and Account Book and Seven Newly Found Letters.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • James, Syrie. “Jane Austen’s First Love: Edward Taylor.” Sensibilities 68 (2024): 79–91.
  • Jones, Chris. “Letter from Jane Austen’s Nephew in the Foundling Hospital Archive.” JAS Report (2024): 22–28. James Edward Austen-Leigh wrote about two of his servants.
  • Kindred, Sheila Johnson, and Hugh Kindred. “‘With Ships and Sailors She Felt Herself at Home’: How Jane Austen’s Siblings Stoked Her Naval Knowledge and Fired Her Creative Imagination.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • Mahoney, Stephen. “Norah Hill (1835–1920).” JAS Report (2024): 17–21. A description of a portrait of a great-niece of Austen.
  • Merriman, Jan. Jane Austen’s Remarkable Aunt, Philadelphia Hancock: ‘A Girl of Genius and Feeling. Barnsley: Pen and Sword History, 2024.
  • _____. “‘One of My Best Friends’: The Intriguing Life of Eliza de Feuillide’s Friend the Comtesse de Tournon (1757–1782).” Sensibilities 68 (2024): 92–108.
  • Rattray, Adam. “A ‘Lost’ Apartment at Jane Austen’s Lodgings, 8 College Street, Winchester.” JAS Report (2024): 104–10.
  • Spencer, Howard. “Elections Regency-Style.” JARW 131 (2024): 2–7. Elections and their impact on Austen family members.
  • Stiller, Maureen. “A Sham Trial.” JARW 129 (2024): 54–55. Francis Austen’s comments about the court-martial of Admiral Thomas Cochrane.
  • Wheddon, Zöe. Jane Austen: Daddy’s Girl: The Life and Influence of the Revd George Austen. Barnsley: Pen and Sword History, 2024.
  • Wilkes, Sue. “In Peril on the Sea.” JARW 128 (2024): 48–53. The development of lifeboats and other safety measures at sea, and their effects on Austen men.
  • Willan, David Austen. “HMS Namur Revisited: Reuniting Charles Austen with His Ceremonial Sword.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).

3. Austen Scholarship 

  • Ahuja, Swarnika. “Embodying ‘the Naïve Reader’s Shame’: Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey. A Case Study.” East-West Cultural Passage 24.1 (2024): 145–70. doi:10.2478/ewcp-2024-0009.
  • Alexander-Jones, Rosemary. “Legitimizing and Authenticating a Post-Heritage Austen Diegesis through Filming Locations.” Film, Fashion & Consumption 13.1 (2024): 47–64. doi:10.1386/ffc_00069_1.
  • Alvarez, Camila. “The Hispanic Perspective: Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility and From Prada to Nada.” Powley and Van Camp 42–47.
  • Ard, Patricia. “Male Friendship in Austen’s Novels.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • Avery Jones, John. “Emma and Entails.” Persuasions 46 (2024): 209–17.
  • _____. “The Figures in Mansfield Park Adjusted for Inflation.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • Babbage, Frances. “Locating Austen in Contemporary Theatre.” Bray and Moss 435–50.
  • Banister, Julia. “Jane Austen and the Figure of the Body.” Bray and Moss 205–17.
  • Barchas, Janine, and Gillian Dow. “Jane Austen and the Imperfect Art of Translation.” Bray and Moss 372–88.
  • Barlow, Angela. “Jane Austen and the Theatre of Her Time.” Bray and Moss 276–90.
  • Barnum, Deborah. “‘Magnesia’—A Possible Book Citation in Jane Austen’s Letters?” JAS Report (2024): 44–48.
  • Barton, Yana. “The Logic of Entailment in Pride and Prejudice.” Persuasions 46 (2024): 200–08.
  • Batchelor, Jennie. “Jane Austen and Crafts.” Bray and Moss 159–73.
  • Bautz, Annika. “Austen in a Competitive Literary Marketplace: Nineteenth-Century Illustrated Editions.” Bray and Moss 351–71.
  • Bending, Stephen. “‘Nothing but Pleasure from Beginning to End’: Austen’s Gardens.” Bray and Moss 321–36.
  • Benedict, Leah. “‘Always Unguarded and Often Uncivil’: A Case for Lydia in the Lizzie Bennet Diaries.” ABO: Interactive Journal for Women in the Arts 14.1 (2024): 1–21. doi:10.5038/2157-7129.14.1.1389.
  • Beraj, Rachel. “Stoneleigh Abbey.” JARW 129 (2024): 2–7.
  • Beswick, Rachel. “Foolish Preparation.” JARW 128 (2024): 34–35. Students should really read Pride and Prejudice.
  • _____. “Siblings Aplenty.” JARW 129 (2024): 34–35. The advantages of siblings in Austen’s novels.
  • Biajoli, Maria Clara Pivato. “When the Pen is in Fans’ Hands—The Jane Austen Fan Fiction Phenomenon.” Bray and Moss 417–34.
  • Brakespear, Jackie. “The Allen Gallery.” JARW 129 (2024): 48–53. Description of museum in Alton, with details about eighteenth-century tea and ceramics.
  • Bray, Joe. “The Perils of Novelistic Adaptation: Death Comes to Pemberley, Longbourn and Pamela.” Bray and Moss 403–16.
  • Bray, Joe, and Hannah Moss, eds. The Edinburgh Companion to Jane Austen and the Arts. Edinburgh: EUP, 2024. Essays are individually cited.
  • Brewer, Kenneth L. “‘[S]he Could Not but Do Him the Justice of Feeling That There Was a Great Deal of Sentiment in His Manner of Naming Harriet’: Reported Speech and the Mind-Twist Plot in Jane Austen’s Emma.” CEA Critic: An Official Journal of the College English Association 86.3 (2024): 179–84.
  • Brick, Dianne. “Mazzinghi’s Music Games.” JAS Report (2024): 111–13. A Regency music game.
  • Brodey, Inger Sigrun Bredkjær. Jane Austen and the Price of Happiness. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 2024.
  • _____. “Picturing (In)Sensibility in Austen’s Novels and Print Culture.” Bray and Moss 92–107.
  • Brown, Carolyn J. “By the Book: Successfully Adapting Jane Austen’s Persuasion.” Powley and Van Camp 21–28.
  • Burns, Margie. Jane Austen, Abolitionist: The Loaded History of the Phrase “Pride and Prejudice.” Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2024.
  • _____. “Soniah Kamal’s Unmarriageable: What Was Mrs. Bennet’s First Name?” Powley and Van Camp 97–106.
  • Comerford, Jennifer. “Hand in Hand: The Erotics of Touch in Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility.” Women’s Writing 31.4 (2024): 699–717. doi:10.1080/09699082.2024.2375893.
  • Cox, Brenda. “The Ambitious Clergyman.” JARW 128 (2024): 28–31. Mr. Elton from Emma examined.
  • _____. “The Earnest Clergyman.” JARW 129 (2024): 28–31. A close-up of Edmund Bertram of Mansfield Park.
  • _____. “Elderly and Poor Clergy.” JARW 131 (2024): 36–41. Approaches to Charles Hayter and Dr. Shirley from Persuasion.
  • _____. “The Gluttonous Clergyman.” JARW 130 (2024): 28–31. A view of Dr. Grant of Mansfield Park.
  • _____. “‘Her Parish and Her Poultry’: The Lives of Clergymen’s Wives in Austen’s World.” Sensibilities 69 (2024): 91–106.
  • _____. “The Honorable Clergyman.” JARW 127 (2024): 22–25. Considerations of Edward Ferrars in Sense and Sensibility.
  • _____. “The Obsequious Clergyman.” JARW 132 (2024): 26–31. A lens on Mr. Collins.
  • _____. “Why Mr. Collins? The Church and Clergy in Jane Austen’s Novels.” Sensibilities 69 (2024): 37–52.
  • Dashwood, Rita J. “Creators of Spaces: The Art of Owning, Inhabiting and Imagining Property in Jane Austen.” Bray and Moss 307–20.
  • Dashwood, Rita J., and Andrew McInnes. “Adapting Jane Austen’s ‘Hetero Nonsense’ in Andrew Ahn and Joel Kim Booster’s Fire Island.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • Davis, Kathryn C. “Jane Austen, Moral Philosophy and the Tradition.” Bray and Moss 47–60.
  • Delafield, Catherine. “Jane Austen and the Letter.” Bray and Moss 337–50.
  • Dickson, Leigh Weatherall. “The Paper Age: Jane Austen, Fashion and Finance.” Bray and Moss 261–75.
  • Dooley, Gillian. She Played and Sang: Jane Austen and Music. Manchester: MUP, 2024.
  • Dooley, Gillian, and Laura Klein. “Drama in Words and Music: Jane Austen Sings: A Program of Theatre Music from the Austen Family Music Collections.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • Duke, Emma Marie. “Pockets, Riddles, and Ciphers: Between Books and Bodies in Jane Austen’s Emma.” Persuasions 46 (2024): 227–36.
  • Dunford, Lizzie. “The Lost Austen Fairy Tales: An Introduction.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • Duquette, Natasha. “Jane Austen, Early Modern Aesthetics and Contemplative Sublimity.” Bray and Moss 15–33.
  • Durant, June. Jane Austen in the Thames Valley. London: Austin Macauley, 2024.
  • Eales, Darren. “‘What Has He to Do with Books?’” JAS Report (2024): 121–37. The 2024 address to JAS.
  • Eccles, Anastasia. “On the Origins of the Witness-Protagonist.” Modern Language Quarterly: A Journal of Literary History 85.2 (2024): 151–76. doi:10.1215/00267929-11060495. Discusses Fanny Price.
  • Emsley, Sarah. “‘She Placed Her Bonnet on His Head & Ran Away’: Stealing Sources and Avoiding Consequences.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • Engel, Laura. “Shadow Portraits: Jane Austen, Lady Susan and Silhouettes.” Bray and Moss 142–58.
  • Erwin, Timothy. “Austen’s Oceans: New Contexts for Persuasion.” 1650–1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era 29 (2024): 156–73. doi:10.2307/jj.18427173.9.
  • Espunya, Anna. “Narrative Report of Speech Acts as Characterization Resource in Mansfield Park and Its Spanish and German Translations.” Language and Literature: International Journal of Stylistics 33.1 (2024): 25–43. doi:10.1177/09639470231213685.
  • Ferguson, Olivia. “Jane Austen, Caricature and the Fat Self.” Bray and Moss 191–204.
  • Fletcher-Crow, Donna. “Jane Austen’s Travels.” JARW 130 (2024): 36–41.
  • Ford, Susan Allen. “‘So Potent and Stimulative’: Jane Austen’s Reading.” Persuasions 46 (2024): 39–52.
  • _____. What Jane Austen’s Characters Read (and Why). London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2024.
  • Freund, Mia Barzilay. “Corresponding Fictions: Elizabeth Bennet’s Letters.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • Friday, Penelope. “Chemist, Lecturer, Poet.” JAWR 129 (2024): 22–27. Impact of Sir Humphrey Davy on the period.
  • García Soria, Cinthia. Pride and Prejudice’s Popularity in the Spanish-Speaking World (Part 2): Austenmania and the First Quarter of the Twenty-First Century.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • Gaston, Lise. “Women and Property Ownership in Jane Austen.” Eighteenth-Century Fiction 36.3 (2024): 501–03. doi:10.3138/ecf.36.3.501.
  • Gehrer, Julienne. “A Visit to the Pastry Cook: Inspiration for The Beautifull Cassandra and Beyond.” Persuasions 46 (2024): 15–27.
  • George, Jacqueline. “Charlotte Heywood and the Narrative Difficulty of Sanditon.” Persuasions 46 (2024): 237–45.
  • George, Leigh-Michil, and Lillian Lu. “‘A Hundred Different Ways of Being in Love’: Emma, Queer Austen, and Asexuality Studies.” Eighteenth-Century Fiction 36.1 (2024): 149–58. doi:10.3138/ecf.36.1.149.
  • Gettelman, Debra. “Jane Austen’s Other Endings.” Imagining Otherwise: How Readers Help to Write Nineteenth-Century Novels. Princeton: PUP, 2024. 18–52.
  • Gevlin, Rachel. “The First Divorced Husband.” Persuasions 46 (2024): 145–56.
  • Giffin, Michael. “Austen and the Hero Concept.” Sensibilities 69 (2024): 23–35.
  • _____. “Classical.” Interpreting Literary Texts: A Post-Kantian Approach. Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars, 2024. 56–96. Section on Jane Austen.
  • Gilligan, Christina J. “‘Interested by Nobody but Mary Crawford’: Identification and Critique in Mansfield Park.” Nineteenth-Century Literature 79.3 (2024): 157–81. doi:10.1525/ncl.2024.79.3.157.
  • Glover, Jon. “Virus and Virality: Zombifying the Regency in Pride and Prejudice and Zombies the Film.” Powley and Van Camp 29–35.
  • Gooneratne, Yasmine. “Making Sense: Jane Austen on the Screen.” Sensibilities 68 (2024): 5–16.
  • Greaney, Michael. “‘So Many Friends!’: Gregariousness and Its Discontents in Jane Austen.” SEL: Studies in English Literature 62.4 (2024): 641–61. doi:10.1353/sel.2024.a941804.
  • Greer, Erin Elizabeth. “Perfectionism and the Conversation of Justice: Austen and Cavell.” Fiction, Philosophy and the Ideal of Conversation. Edinburgh: EUP, 2024. 31–62.
  • Grover, Danielle. “Narcissistic Men.” JARW 130 (2024): 42–47. Wickham and Willoughby considered.
  • Gündüz, Ela İpek. “‘Lost in Austen,’ Found in Regency.” Çankaya University Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences 18.1 (2024): 39–55. doi:10.47777/cankujhss.1429495.
  • _____. “Nostalgic Austenmania: Transcoding Pride and Prejudice.” Litera: Dil, Edebiyat ve Kültür Araştırmaları Dergisi 34 (2024): 469–90. doi:10.26650/LITERA2024-1505522.
  • Gupta, Radhika. “Reading Austen’s Fiction as Modern: Women’s Outward and Social Movements in Jane Austen’s Novels.” Women’s Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal 53.8 (2024): 967–89. doi:10.1080/00497878.2024.2395522.
  • Hafez, Faten M. “Jane Austen: From Androcentrism to Anthropocentrism.” Watchung Review 5 (2024): 14–22.
  • Halsey, Katie. “‘Possessing a Most Exquisite Taste in Every Species of Literature’: Reading, Moral Taste and Creative Action in Jane Austen’s Novels.” Bray and Moss 76–91.
  • Harris, Jocelyn. “Women of Genius in Germaine de Staël’s Corinne and Jane Austen’s Emma.” Persuasions 46 (2024): 106–16.
  • Hemingway, Collins. “Allure, and Danger, of the Epistolary: From Richardson to Lady Susan.” Sensibilities 68 (2024): 109–32.
  • _____. “Despicable Lucy.” JARW 131 (2024): 18–23. Lucy Steele examined.
  • _____. Jane Austen and the Creation of Modern Fiction: Six Novels in “A Style Entirely New.” Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2024.
  • Henry, Robin. “Austenland: Being ‘Ready to Laugh’ about Your Favorite Austen Adaptation Tropes.” Powley and Van Camp 59–65.
  • Horton, Catherine Miller. “Minding Manors: Interiorities and Interiors in Pride and Prejudice.” Midwest Quarterly 65.2 (2024): 104–16.
  • Huhn, Tom. “Taste and Passion, Disinterest and the Imagination.” Bray and Moss 34–46.
  • Hussain, Azar. “Jane Austen’s ‘Orchard in Blossom.’” JAS Report (2024): 87–103. An analysis of Austen’s possible error of describing an orchard in blossom in midsummer in Emma.
  • _____. “‘Nameless and Dateless’: Jane Austen’s Unknown Suitor.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • Jane Austen Society. News Letter. Nos. 62–63 (2024). Ed. Marion Davies.
  • _____. Report for 2024. Ed. Hazel Jones. Essays are individually cited.
  • Jane Austen Society (Northern Branch). Impressions 73–75 (2024). Ed. Marilyn Joice.
  • Jane Austen Society of Australia. JASA Chronicle (2024). Ed. Ruth Williamson.
  • _____. Sensibilities 68–69 (2024). Ed. Joanna Penglase. Essays are individually cited.
  • Jane Austen Society of North America. JASNA News 39.4, 40.1–3 (2024). Ed. Susan Wampler.
  • _____. Persuasions: The Jane Austen Journal 46 (2024). Ed. Susan Allen Ford. Essays are individually cited.
  • _____. Persuasions: The Jane Austen Journal On-Line 45.1 (2024). Ed. Susan Allen Ford. Essays are individually cited.
  • Jane Austen’s Regency World [JARW] 127–132 (2024). Ed. Jackie Herring. Austen-related articles are individually cited.
  • Johns, Alessa. “Austen’s Persuasion.” Persuasion after Rhetoric in the Eighteenth Century and Romanticism. Ed. Solomonescu Yasmin and H. Uhlig Stefan. Oxford: OUP, 2024. 121–38.
  • Johnston, Freya. “Austen’s Wordsworth.” Romanticism: The Journal of Romantic Culture and Criticism 30.3 (2024): 249–60. doi:10.3366/rom.2024.0657.
  • Jones, Susan E. “Austen Rewritten: Persuasion or Not.” Powley and Van Camp 188–94.
  • Jones, Wendy. “Narratology Talks to the Talking Cure in Persuasion.” Poetics Today 45.4 (2024): 671–93. doi:10.1215/03335372-11381624.
  • Jordan, Harriett. “‘Such Different Accounts of You’: Representations of Darcy on the Screen.” Sensibilities 68 (2024): 41–56.
  • Joseph, Sahar Zaheen, et al. “Austen’s Sub-Continental Fans: A Comparative Study of Pride and Prejudice’s Fan Fiction from Pakistan and India.” Pakistan Social Sciences Review 8 (2024): 663–71. doi:10.35484/pssr.2024(8-II-S)58.
  • Kamitsuka, Margaret D. “Erotic Blush: Augustine, Austen, and Narcissism.” Desirable Belief: A Theology of Eros. Minneapolis: Fortress, 2024. 7–30.
  • Kelly, Caitlin L. “Guidebooks, Itineraries, and Ways of Seeing: Scripting Tourism in Northanger Abbey.” Persuasions 46 (2024): 53–62.
  • Kenyon Jones, Christine. Jane Austen and Lord Byron: Regency Relations. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2024.
  • _____. “Jane Austen, Lord Byron, and Free Indirect Discourse.” Persuasions 46 (2024): 95–105.
  • Keymer, Tom. “Jane Austen and the Jurassic.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • Kitalong, Karla Saari. “Usability Meets Fictional Worlds: Personas in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice and Sonali Dev’s Pride, Prejudice, and Other Flavors.” Powley and Van Camp 162–78.
  • Knapp, Steven. “How Do You Prefer Your Pride and Prejudice: With or Without Zombies?” Powley and Van Camp 80–86.
  • Krueger, Misty. “The Jane Austen Heritage Industry and Literary Tourism.” Bray and Moss 513–26.
  • Kumar, Sharmini. “Embodying Austen for TV: Bridgerton and Sanditon.” Powley and Van Camp 87–96.
  • Lashari, Asadullah, et al. “‘Women Live at the Mercy of Men’—Undergraduate Students’ Responses to Gender in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice and Contemporary Pakistani Society.” University of Chitral Journal of Linguistics and Literature 8.1 (2024): 369–75.
  • Lees, Belinda. “Representing the Child-Free Woman in the Twenty-First Century Biopic.” Journal of Screenwriting 15.2 (2024): 151–68. doi:10.1386/josc_00149_2. Includes Becoming Jane (2007).
  • Libin, Kathryn L. “Mary Bennet and the Limits of Accomplishment.” Persuasions 46 (2024): 183–99.
  • _____. “Music in Jane Austen’s Novels.” Bray and Moss 232–46.
  • Line-Van Camp, Annie. “Regency Reimagined in Twenty-First-Century Culture.” Powley and Van Camp 203–10.
  • Linkin, Harriet Kramer. “Humor as a Bonding Mechanism in Sense and Sensibility.” Persuasions 46 (2024): 171–82.
  • _____. “Taking Liberty with Imagination and Gender in Northanger Abbey.” Essays in Romanticism 31.2 (2024): 151–69. doi:10.3828/eir.2024.31.2.5.
  • Litt, Veronica. “Jane Austen’s Inelegant Avatar: Proper Expression, Social Compliance, and Harriet Smith.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • MacLean, Katie. “Mansfield Park (1999) versus Mansfield Park (2007): How Do You Solve a Problem like Fanny Price?” Powley and Van Camp 107–15.
  • Makin, Mark. “The Friendship of Marriage: Aristotle, Wollstonecraft, and Charity Itself in Austen’s Pride and Prejudice.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • Malcolm, Gabriella.  “Revisiting Jane Bennet.” JARW 132 (2024): 2–7.
  • Mandal, Anthony. “Austen Reloaded: Digital Approaches to Jane Austen and the Arts.” Bray and Moss 491–512.
  • Manning, Lona. “‘I Am Not Yet So Much Changed’: Turning Persuasion into Captain Wentworth’s Diary.” Powley and Van Camp 116–23.
  • _____. “Novel First Impressions.” JARW 127 (2024): 18–21. The novel that forced Austen to change the title of Pride and Prejudice.
  • Markasović, Valentina. “‘Please Don’t Tell Mrs. Wattlesbrook’: The Panopticon in Austenland (2007).” Časopis za Književnost, Kulturu i Književno Prevođenje/A Journal of Literature, Culture and Literary Translation 15.1 (2024). doi:10.15291/sic/1.15.lc.1.
  • Maskell, Duke. “Voice and Judgment in Mansfield Park.” Essays in Criticism: A Quarterly Journal of Literary Criticism 74.1 (2024): 17–34. doi:10.1093/escrit/cgae001.
  • Massei-Chamayou, Marie-Laure. “Economic and Symbolic Transmissions in Women’s Novels: Frances Burney, Jane Austen, Elizabeth Gaskell.” Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens 99 (2024): 1–16.
  • McCue, Maureen. “‘The Creative Eye of Fancy’: Women, Visual Culture and the Female Gaze in Austen’s Novels.” Bray and Moss 129–41.
  • McDonald, Kelly M. “Nurse Rooke: English Gentry and the Role of the Monthly Nurse in Persuasion.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • McQueen, Kelsey. “Austen, Adaptation, and American Literature: An Analysis of Ibi Zoboi’s Pride.” Adaptation: The Journal of Literature on Screen Studies 17.2 (2024): 253–64. doi:10.1093/adaptation/apae011.
  • Menon, Tara K. “Constructing Attachment: Persistent and Elided Speech in Jane Austen’s Novels.” Novel: A Forum on Fiction 57 (2024): 375–98. doi:10.1215/00295132-11403591.
  • Michie, Allen. “Jane Austen and John Coltrane.” Jazz and Literature: An Introduction. Ed. Maria Antónia Lima and Mia Funk. New York: Routledge, 2024. 15–21.
  • Mikinski, Madeleine. “‘The Daily Interchange of News’: Networks of Information in Austen’s Adult Work.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • Moore, Roger E. “Wolves in Sheep’s Clothing? Jane Austen’s Clergymen and Their Literary Ancestors.” Persuasions 46 (2024): 63–80.
  • Moore, Tara. “A Quirky, Colorful, Romantic Comedy for the Twenty-First Century: De Wilde’s Emma (2020).” Powley and Van Camp 195–202.
  • Moss, Hannah. “Reforming the Artist Heroine: Reading Sense and Sensibility (1811) as a Response to Jane West’s A Gossip’s Story (1796).” Bray and Moss 76–91.
  • Muir, Rory. Love and Marriage in the Age of Jane Austen. New Haven: Yale UP, 2024.
  • Münderlein, Kerstin-Anja. “Women Reprimanding Women: The Gothic Parody and Its Social Criticism.” European Journal of American Studies 19 (2024). doi:10.4000/12avf. Considers Northanger Abbey.
  • Nepomnyashchy, Catharine Theimer, et al. “Jane Austen in Russia: Hidden Presence and Belated Boom.” From Pushkin to Popular Culture: Essays by Catharine Theimer Nepomnyashchy. Boston: Academic Studies, 2024.
  • Nixon, Lauren. “‘I Am Having a Bit of a Strange Postmodern Moment Here’: Adapting Austen for Television.” Bray and Moss 451–64.
  • _____. “Regimental Charms.” JARW 172 (2024): 14–17. The popularity of the British soldier as reflected in Austen’s novels.
  • Norland, Joanna. “From Potosi to Pemberley.” JARW 131 (2024): 52–55. Adapting and adaptation.
  • Parey, Armelle. “Characters in Search of an Ending in Laura Wade’s Stage Adaptation of Jane Austen’s The Watsons/Des personnages en quê te d’une fin dans l’adaptation théâtrale de The Watsons de Jane Austen par Laura Wade.” Etudes Britanniques Contemporaines: Revue de la Société d’Etudes Anglaises Contemporaines 66 (2024). doi:10.4000/11r4t.
  • Parisot, Eric. Jane Austen and Vampires. Cham: Springer International, 2024. Palgrave Gothic.
  • Peacock, Rachel. “‘My Kindest Albert Read to Me’: Jane Austen’s Novels and Queen Victoria’s Domestic Bliss.” Persuasions 46 (2024): 246–55.
  • Pearson, Sara L., Claire Bellanti, and Robin Henry. “Jane Austen Bibliography, 2023.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • Pelling, Madeleine. “Theme Parks and Seaside Resorts: Rethinking Material and Visual Culture in Sanditon (2019) and Austenland (2013).” Bray and Moss 465–76.
  • Peters, Alora. “False Impressions: Withholding Information and Revelations of Truth in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice.” Sigma Tau Delta Review: Journal of Critical Writing 21 (2024): 282–87.
  • Peterson, Lesley. “‘That Little Insignificant Fellow, Tom Thumb’: Henry Fielding’s Early Burlesque and the Origins of Jane Austen’s Style.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • Powley, Tammy. “Manners versus Passion: An Examination of Director Joe Wright’s Film Pride and Prejudice.” Powley and Van Camp 36–41.
  • Powley, Tammy, and April Van Camp. Retelling Jane Austen: Essays on Recent Adaptations and Derivative Works. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2024. Essays are individually cited.
  • Rampelli, Melissa. “The Sentimental Heroine and Hysteria in Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility.” Narratives of Women’s Health and Hysteria in the Nineteenth-Century Novel. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2024. 13–52.
  • Reid, Kaitlyn. “Spice Sells: Bridgerton, Sex, and the Jane Austen Brand.” Adapting Bridgerton: Essays on the Netflix Show in Context. Ed. Valerie Estelle Frankel. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2024. 171–85.
  • Rendell, Mike. “A Little Wilderness.” JARW 128 (2024): 18–23. The eighteenth-century concept of “wilderness” and Austen’s novels.
  • _____. “Nothing but Tea.” JARW 127 (2024): 38–43. Links between Austen and tea.
  • Reznicek, Matthew L. “It Was Sickness and Poverty Together: Teaching Inequality and Health Humanities in Austen’s Emma.” Teaching the Eighteenth Century Now: Pedagogy as Ethical Engagement. Ed. Kate Parker and Miriam L. Wallace. Lewisburg: Bucknell UP, 2024. 102–15.
  • Riestra-Camacho, Rocío, and Miguel Ángel Jordán Enamorado. “A Psychoneuroimmunological Reading of Jane Austen’s Persuasion in the Context of Bodily Aging.” Journal of Medical Humanities 45.2 (2024): 139–55. doi:10.1007/s10912-024-09845-1.
  • Roschman, Melodie. “‘Tale[s] as Old as Time': Teaching Adaptation Criticism Using Fairy Tales.” Fairy Tales in the College Classroom: Essays to Spark Lesson Plan Ideas across the Curriculum. Ed. Heather Powers. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2024. 181–95. Focuses on Austen film adaptations.
  • Rushefsky, Michelle L. “Bloody Petticoats: Performative Monstrosity of the Female Slayer in Seth Grahame-Smith’s Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.” Humanities 13 (2024): 52–70.
  • Russell, Roslyn. “Presence and Absence: Sermons and Devotional Literature in Jane Austen’s Novels.” Sensibilities 69 (2024): 53–71.
  • Russo, Stephanie. “‘Three or Four Families in a RPG’: Gaming and Jane Austen.” Bray and Moss 477–90.
  • Ryan, Denise. “Jane Austen and the Politics of Privilege.” Sensibilities 69 (2024): 107–15.
  • Rytting, Jenny Rebecca, and Maria Clara Pivato Biajoli. “Austen Annotated around the World: Emma and Northanger Abbey in Five Languages.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • Sabor, Peter. “‘The Capital Pen of a Sister Author’: Reading Frances Burney with Jane Austen.” Persuasions 46 (2024): 81–94.
  • Schubert, Tiffany. Jane Austen’s Romantic Medievalism: Courtly Love and Happy Endings. Bethlehem, PA: Lehigh UP, 2024.
  • Scott, Damianne Candice. “Unwarranted Disapprovals: The Campaign to Stop Diversity and Inclusiveness in Jane Austen Films.” Powley and Van Camp 48–58.
  • Sharma, Mridula. “Globalized Austen: Or, the Unsurprising Failure of Postcolonial Ambitions.” Powley and Van Camp 136–42.
  • Shelby, Alexander. “Uzma Jalaluddin’s World: Pride and Prejudice and Ayesha at Last.” Powley and Van Camp 150–56.
  • Shen, Zhongliang. “Strength of Mind, Self-Command, and Elasticity of Mind in Jane Austen’s Persuasion.” Women’s Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal 53.5 (2024): 541–55. doi:10.1080/00497878.2024.2309959.
  • Siegle, Brian E. “Major Music, Minor Shades: Music and Cultural Crossovers in Netflix’s Bridgerton.” Powley and Van Camp 157–61.
  • Sienkiewicz-Charlish, Agnieszka. “Susan Ferrier: ‘The Scottish Jane Austen.’” Beyond Philology: An International Journal of Linguistics, Literary Studies and English Language Teaching 21.3 (2024): 103–15. doi:10.26881/bp.2024.3.05.
  • Solinger, Jason. “Ibi Zoboi’s Pride Rooted in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice.” Powley and Van Camp 66–68.
  • Stanfield, Paul Scott. “Why Her? An Attempt to Account for the Enduring Appeal of Jane Austen.” Torch 97.3 (2024): 6–11.
  • Stasi, Paul. “‘She Knew She Ought to Be Happy’: Socialized Subjects in Emma.” Novel: A Forum on Fiction 57.3 (2024): 357–74. doi:10.1215/00295132-11403574.
  • Stephens, Scott. “At the Precipice: Moral Encounter and Its Refusal in Jane Austen’s Later Fiction.” Sensibilities 69 (2024): 72–90.
  • Stockwell, Peter. “Can Children Read Irony? A Cautionary Tale.” Children’s Literature and Childhood Discourses: Exploring Identity through Fiction. Ed. Anna Cermakova and Michaela Mahlberg. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2024. 31–52. Discusses Emma and Pride and Prejudice.
  • Stohr, Karen. “Rich People Problems: Austenian Landowners and Aristotelian Virtue.” Persuasions 46 (2024): 218–26.
  • Stove, Judith. “In Training for a Heroine: Northanger Abbey (2007).” Powley and Van Camp 179–87.
  • _____. “Parody, Pastiche, and Peas: An Appreciation of Whit Stillman’s Novel and Film Love & Friendship.” Powley and Van Camp 69–79.
  • Tariq, Sana, Syed Kazim Shah, and Muhammed Ilyar Mahmood. “Exploring Societal Constructs through Marriage Discourses: A Critical Analysis of Jane Austen’s Emma.” Pakistan Languages and Humanities Review 8 (2024): 406–14. doi:10.47205/plhr.2024(8-II-S)37.
  • Taylor, Jessica. “Regretting Nothing, or Regretting Everything? Postfeminism, Femininity, and Regret in Miss Austen Regrets.” Camera Obscura: A Journal of Feminism, Culture, and Media Studies 2nd ser. 39.116 (2024): 41–69. doi:10.1215/02705346-11207802.
  • Thomas, M’Balia. “Con Artist: Non-Cosplay Participation at Popular Culture Conventions as an Arts-Based Method of Inquiring into Resistance and the Undoing of Rules.” Qualitative Inquiry 30.2 (2024): 257–62.

    DOI:10.1177/10778004231176095. Analyzes the 2018 JASNA AGM.

  • Tieken-Boon van Ostade, Ingrid. “Jane Austen’s Will—and Those of the Two Cassandras.” English Studies: A Journal of English Language and Literature 105.4 (2024): 550–68. doi:10.1080/0013838X.2024.2344274.
  • Toner, Anne. “Jane Austen’s Conversation Pieces.” Bray and Moss 174–90.
  • Toop, David. “Piano/Forte: Writing Audible Space, Jane Austen, Dorothy Richardson, and Others.” The Edinburgh Companion to Literature and Sound Studies. Ed. Helen Groth and Julian Murphet. Edinburgh: EUP, 2024. 45–58.
  • Tripathi, Lata, and Nanda Vinita. “Who Needs a Hero? Redefining Female Agency in Jane Austen’s Novels.” Creative Saplings 3.6 (2024). doi:43-630974-536X.
  • Tuite, Clara. “The Flemish Jane Austen.” Bray and Moss 108–28.
  • Ulfsdotter, Boel. “Dressing Darkness: Sidney Parker as Anti-Hero.” Film, Fashion & Consumption 13.1 (2024): 11–29. doi:10.1386/ffc_00067_1. Discusses costumes in Sanditon.
  • Usmani, Sufia, and Shivani Kaul. “Feminism and Literature: Reclaiming the Canon-Enduring Relevance of Jane Austen’s Works.” Library of Progress-Library Science, Information Technology and Computer 44.3 (2024): 4487–90.
  • Valentine, Colton. “Illness as Character as Metaphor.” ELH: English Literary History 91.2 (2024): 441–65. doi:10.1353/elh.2024.a929155. Includes Sense and Sensibility.
  • Valero Redondo, María. “The Unacknowledged Connection: Intertextuality and Character Archetypes in Jane Austen’s and Henry James’s Novels.” Brno Studies in English: Sborník Prací Filozofické Fakulty Brněnské Univerzity, S: Řada Anglisticá/Series Anglica 50.2 (2024): 169-92. doi:10.5817/bse2024-2-8.
  • Vallaro, Cristina. “The Beginning of a Novel from Page to Screen: The Example of Pride and Prejudice (1813 and 1940).” Open Journal of Humanities 16 (2024): 1–34. doi:10.5281/zenodo.15496971.
  • _____. Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice from Page to Screen. Milan: Catholic U Sacred Heart, 2024.
  • Van Camp, April, and Tammy Powley. “Jane Austen in Context.” Powley and Van Camp 9–20.
  • Vandenberg, Natalie. “‘So Altered That He Should Not Have Known Her Again’: An Examination of Authenticity in the 2022 Film Persuasion.” Powley and Van Camp 124–35.
  • Vickery, Amanda. “Was Austen Political?” Persuasions 46 (2024): 129–44.
  • Visan, Nadina. “‘The Dinner Was as Well Dressed as Any I Ever Saw’: Intertextuality in Nine Romanian Versions of Pride and Prejudice.” Cultural Intertexts 14 (2024): 183–95. doi:10.5281/zenodo.14288057.
  • Vishnuvajjala, Usha. “Nested Medievalisms and Affected Bodies in Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey.” Feminist Medievalisms: Embodiment and Vulnerability in Literature and Film. Leeds: Arc Humanities, 2024. 19–44.
  • Walker, Eric C. “Natural Children: Jane Austen and Adoption.” Haphazard Families: Romanticism, Nation, and the Prehistory of Modern Adoption. Columbus: Ohio State UP, 2024. 69–104.
  • Wallace, Tara Ghoshal. “Confidence Men: Male Dialogue in Austen’s Novels.” Persuasions 46 (2024): 157–70.
  • Wells, Juliette. “‘He Has Great Pleasure in Seeing the Performances of Other People’: Austen’s Men and the Arts.” Bray and Moss 218–31.
  • Wells, Laura. “Defending Charlotte Lucas.” JARW 127 (2024): 48–51.
  • _____. “A Reading Revolution.” JARW 132 (2024): 50–55. The rise of circulating libraries.
  • Whalan, Pamela. “‘There Was a Great Deal of Needlework to Be Done’: Austen’s Use of Needlework in Mansfield Park.” Sensibilities 69 (2024): 5–22.
  • Whitley, Kathleen P. “The Pursuit of Health: Medical Advances in the Age of Austen.” Persuasions 46 (2024): 28–38.
  • Wiebracht, Ben, et al. “Jane Austen, Doctor Syntax, and the Mass Market.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • Wilkes, Joanne. “Dealing with Jane Austen’s Unfinished Novels: Completions of The Watsons and Sanditon.” Bray and Moss 389–402.
  • Wilkes, Sue. “As Poor as a Stockinger.” JARW 132 (2024): 36–40. The importance of stockings in Austen’s time.
  • _____. “A Bright Future.” JARW 127 (2024): 44–47. Glass making and the Industrial Revolution.
  • _____. “Forging a New Era.” JARW 130 (2024): 16–21. Cast iron and the world of Austen.
  • _____. “Must We Buy Lace?” JARW 131 (2024): 26–30. Lace making by hand and machine.
  • _____. “Pretty Spotted Muslin.” JAWR 129 (2024): 16–20. The development of the calico industry.
  • _____. “Steam Power.” JARW 128 (2024): 44–47. Steam power and its effects on the world of Austen.
  • Wilson, Cheryl A. “Jane Austen’s Dance Dialogues: Representing Dance in the Novels.” Bray and Moss 247–60.
  • Witherington, Laura S. “Lost in a Comedy of Humors: Lost in Austen’s Break from Trope.” Powley and Van Camp 143–49.
  • Wolf, Alain J. E. “Does Jane Austen Matter? Foreign Language Students’ Perspectives to Literature Teaching.” Buckingham Journal of Education 5.1 (2024): 43–60. doi:10.5750/tbje.v5i1.2291.
  • Wood, Breckyn. “Good Tenses Make Good Neighbors: Or, How Grammar and Linguistics Shaped Austen’s Moral Worldview.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • Yalçın, Olgahan Bakşi. “The Precarious Existence of Jane Austen’s Charlotte Lucas across Time and Text.” Proceedings of the International Conference on Gender Research (ICGR) (2024): 44–50.
  • Young, Rosetta. “‘How Nicely You Talk; I Love to Hear You’: Speech as Cultural Capital in Emma, Middlemarch, and The Portrait of a Lady.” Nineteenth-Century Literature 78 (2024): 286–315. doi:10.1525/ncl.2024.78.4.286.
  • Youngman, Angela. The Dark Side of Jane Austen’s World. Barnsley: Pen and Sword History, 2024.
  • Zhang, Lin. “The Modern Imagination of the Governess: Reshaping Sanditon with Post-Feminism.” Film, Fashion & Consumption 13.1 (2024): 31–46. doi:10.1386/ffc_00068_1.
  • Zionkowski, Linda. “Jane Austen, James Beresford, and the Comedy of Complaint.” Persuasions 46 (2024): 117–28.
  • Zionkowski, Linda, and Miriam F. Hart, eds. Women and Music in the Age of Austen. Lewisburg: Bucknell UP, 2024.
  • Zohn, Kristen Miller. “Exposed to the Public Eye: Austen’s 1813 Viewing of Professional Female Visual Artists.” Persuasions On-Line 45.1 (2024).
  • _____. “Jane Austen, Architecture and the Decorative Arts.” Bray and Moss 291–306.

4. Selected Dissertations

  • Amick, Mary. “‘Where the Heart Is Really Attached’: Partner Compatibility in the Works of Jane Austen.” MA Thesis Liberty U, 2024.
  • Baugh, Victoria. “Race and Authority: Building Racial Epistemologies in Nineteenth-Century British and Caribbean Women’s Writing.” Diss. Cornell U, 2024.
  • Clawson, Brandilyn. “Beyond the Bindings: Eighteenth-Century Women’s Reading and Literary Allusion in Austen’s Novels.” MA Thesis Idaho State U, 2024.
  • de Sousa, Karin Soares. “Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice and the Relevance of Community, Private and Public Spaces in Forming Connections.” MA Thesis U Porto, 2024.
  • Dennis, Kylie. “Novel Care: Public Health and Professional Caregiving in the Nineteenth-Century British Domestic Novel.” Diss. Rutgers U, 2024. Chapter 1 is on Sanditon.
  • Hathout, Shahira Adel. “‘Re-Membering’ a Disappearing Coast: A Diffractive Reading of Lyme Regis between Persuasion and the Anthropocene.” Diss. Trent U, 2024. Chapter 3 is on Persuasion.
  • Iftikhar, Shabnum. “Fictional Geography: Space and Place in Four Novels by Jane Austen, Emily Brontë, Joseph Conrad, and Ahmed Ali.” Diss. U Texas Dallas, 2024. Chapter 3 is on Pride and Prejudice.
  • Johnson, Emma. “Repression and Psychological Subversion in Austen’s Emma and Mansfield Park: ‘There Are Secrets in All Families.’” MA Thesis U Colorado Boulder, 2024.
  • Leong, Alexandra. “Reading Women’s Emotional Complexity in Women’s Novels.” Diss. U Minnesota, 2024. Chapter 2 is on Sense and Sensibility.
  • Lints, Emily. “Negotiating Femininity: Expressions of Gender and the Policing of Female Hierarchies in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice.” MA Thesis U British Columbia, 2024.
  • Lynch, Kyriana. “Imagining Queer Power: Colonialism and the Queer Mentor in Fiction, 1790–1850.” Diss. U Notre Dame, 2024. Includes a discussion of Emma.
  • Moon, Dan Bee. “Reading the Right Way: Novel Education in the Nineteenth Century.” Diss. U Washington, 2024. Chapter 1 includes Northanger Abbey and Pride and Prejudice.
  • Neal, Brooke M. “Overcoming the Sinful States: Anne Finch’s ‘Psalm the 137th: Paraphrased to the 7th Verse’ as a Poem of Spiritual Transition and Vessels of Desire in Jane Austen’s Persuasion.” MA Thesis U North Carolina Greensboro, 2024. Chapter 3 is on Persuasion.
  • Nesbø, Johanne Heen. “The Zeal of a Friend.” MA Thesis U Oslo, 2024. Discusses friendship in Emma.
  • Neumann, Janna-Lena. “Miles and More: Quantifying Mobility in the English Novel.” Diss. Hanover U, 2024. Uses Austen’s novels as a case study.
  • Paśnik, Martyna. “In Pursuit of Jane Austen—Jane Austen’s Characters and Their Adaptability from Literature to Film Fiction.” Diss. U Lodz, 2024.
  • Qiu, Xinyuan. “‘Disciplinary Sentimentality’ in British Sentimental Fiction of the Global Eighteenth Century.” Diss. State U New York Binghamton, 2024. Chapter 4 is on Mansfield Park.
  • Stearns, Katherine Ruth. “From Contemplation to Action: The Transformation of Feminine Interiority in the Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century British Novel.” Diss. U Dallas, 2024. Includes a discussion of Mansfield Park.
  • Thompson, Marie A. “In the Company of Austen’s Men: Male Behavior and Virtue Ethics.” Diss. Indiana U Pennsylvania, 2024.
  • Zille, Tom. “The First of the Modern English Novelists: Engagements with Jane Austen in the Early Twentieth-Century English Novel.” Diss. U Cambridge, 2024.

5. Popular Culture

  • Adams, Jennifer, and Alison Oliver. Persuasion: A Colors Primer. Kaysville: Gibbs Smith, 2024. Board book.
  • An American in Austen. Dir. Clare Niederpruem. Perf. Eliza Bennett, Nicholas Bishop, Nell Barlow. Hallmark, 2024. TV movie.
  • Bedford, Jessica, et al. The Complete Works of Jane Austen, Abridged. New York: Samuel French, an imprint of Concord Theatricals, 2024. Play script.
  • Bellezza, Audrey, and Emily Harding. Elizabeth of East Hampton. New York: Gallery, 2024.
  • Beswick, Rachel. “Dear Valentine.” JARW 127 (2024): 32–33. Learn how to handle Valentine’s Day from Austen.
  • Bull, Jessica. Miss Austen Investigates: The Hapless Milliner. New York: Union Square, 2024.
  • Camlin, Anne, and Isadora Zeferino. Mismatched. New York: Little, Brown Ink, 2024. A graphic novel retelling of Emma.
  • Conner, Hari. I Shall Never Fall in Love. New York: HarperAlley, 2024. Graphic novel.
  • Cooper, Zoe. Northanger Abbey. London: Nick Hern, 2024. Play script.
  • Corbett, Linda. What Would Jane Austen Do? Glasgow: One More Chapter, 2024.
  • Cox, Michelle. Matched in Merriweather: Jane Austen in Wisconsin. Grayslake, IL: Woolton, 2024.
  • Davies, Andrew. Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice (Davies). New York: Samuel French, an imprint of Concord Theatricals, 2024. Play script.
  • Dix, Ellie, and Mandela Fernández Grandon. The Jane Austen Game. Illus. Barry Falls. London: Laurence King, 2024. Board game.
  • Dudley, Christina Hwang. Pride and Preston Lin. San Franscisco: Third State, 2024.
  • Durant, June. Another Search for Words in Jane Austen. London: Austin Macauley, 2024.
  • Edwards, Melodie. Once Persuaded, Twice Shy. New York: Berkley Romance, 2024. A reimagining of Persuasion.
  • Giret, Gwen, and Claire Saim. Jane Austen: Visual Encyclopedia: Novels and Adaptations, Characters and Locations. Illus. Sophie Koechlin. London: Titan Books, 2024.
  • Gray, Claudia. The Perils of Lady Catherine de Bourgh. Toronto: Viking, 2024.
  • Gunderson, Lauren, and Margot Melcon. Georgiana and Kitty: Christmas at Pemberley. New York: Dramatists Play Service, 2024. Play script.
  • Harrison, Nan. No Less Resentment: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. N.p.: Quills and Quartos, 2024.
  • Jane Austen Wrecked My Life [Jane Austen a gâché ma vie]. Dir. Laura Piani. Perf. Camille Rutherford, Pablo Pauly, Charlie Anson. Sony Pictures, 2024. Film.
  • Kelly, Vanessa. Murder in Highbury. New York: Kensington, 2024.
  • Khambete-Sharma, Vedashree. What Will People Think? London: Corvus, 2024. Related to Pride and Prejudice.
  • Kim, A. H. Relative Strangers. New York: Graydon, 2024. An adaptation of Sense and Sensibility.
  • Laforme, Joy. Sticker Jigsaw: Pride and Prejudice. New York: Odd Dot/Macmillan, 2024.
  • Lampley, Alexis. Pride and Prejudice in Space. New York: Union Square, 2024.
  • May, Nikki. This Motherless Land. New York: Mariner, 2024. Reimagines Mansfield Park.
  • Novoa, Gabe Cole. Most Ardently: A Pride and Prejudice Remix. New York: Feiwel and Friends, an imprint of Macmillan, 2024.
  • Oakley, Jacqui. The World of Jane Austen: A Conversation Puzzle. New York: Clarkson Potter, 2024. Jigsaw puzzle.
  • Payne, Nikki. Sex, Lies, and Sensibility. New York: Berkley, 2024.
  • Peterson, Robbin J. Finding Jane Fairfax. American Fork, UT: Covenant, 2024.
  • The Pocket Jane Austen: Quizzes and Puzzles. Woodbridge: Gemini Books, 2024.
  • Price, Tirzah. In Want of a Suspect: A Lizzie and Darcy Mystery. New York: Harper, 2024.
  • Proudman, Sandra, ed. Relit: 16 Latinx Remixes of Classic Stories. Toronto: Inkyard, 2024. Contains a remix of Pride and Prejudice.
  • Quaine, Amanda. Dashed: A Margaret Dashwood Novel. New York: Wednesday, 2024.
  • Rebel Girls. Episode 10, Jane Austen. Belfast: Makematic, 2024. Short video.
  • Roberts, Sheila. The Merry Matchmaker. Toronto: Mira, 2024. Related to Emma.
  • Vogler, Pen. Dinner with Mr Darcy: Recipes Inspired by the Novels and Letters of Jane Austen. Rev. ed. London: Ryland, 2024.
  • Wood, Laura. Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice: A Retelling by Laura Wood. New York: Union Square, 2024.

 

NOTES



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; keep 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.

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