Jane Austen's Names: Riddles, Persons, Places by Margaret Doody

Jane Austen's Names: Riddles, Persons, Places

Margaret Doody
438 pages
The University of Chicago Press
Apr 2015
Hardcover
History WSBN
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In Jane Austen's works, a name is never just a name. In fact, the names Austen gives her characters and places are as rich in subtle meaning as her prose itself. Wiltshire, for example, the home county of Catherine Morland in <i>Northanger Abbey</i>, is a clue that this heroine is not as stupid as she seems: according to legend, cunning Wiltshire residents caught hiding contraband in a pond capitalized on a reputation for ignorance by claiming they were digging up a &quot;big cheese&quot; - the moon's reflection on the water's surface. It worked.<br><br> In <i>Jane Austen's Names, </i>Margaret Doody offers a fascinating and comprehensive study of all the names of people and places - real and imaginary - in Austen's fiction. Austen's creative choice of names reveals not only her virtuosic talent for riddles and puns. Her names also pick up deep stories from English history, especially the various civil wars, and the blood-tinged differences that played out in the reign of Henry VIII, a period to which she often returns. Considering the major novels alongside unfinished works and juvenilia, Doody shows how Austen's names signal class tensions as well as regional, ethnic, and religious differences. We gain a new understanding of Austen's technique of creative anachronism, which plays with and against her skillfully deployed realism - in her books, the conflicts of the past swirl into the tensions of the present, transporting readers beyond the Regency.<br><br> Full of insight and surprises for even the most devoted Janeite, <i>Jane Austen's Names</i> will revolutionize how we read Austen's fiction.<br>
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The art itself is nature

Prof. Doody, after a lifetime of reading novels, has produced an extraordinary exposition of the personal, family and place names of Jane Austen's oeuvre. Though I am older than Prof. Doody, and presumeably have been reading Jane and her predecessors about as long, there was much new and ever more bundled in this volume. Catherine Moreland's sometime freind Isabella Thorpe would not have found this truly horrid. Fanny Price would not have read it to Lady Bertram. But I read it with pleasure; and will (if my spouse relinquishes it) re-read parts of it. After all, there might be a relationship between Mansfield Park and Trollope's The Bertrams (1859). Read more

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About this book
Pages 438
Publisher The University of Ch...
Published 2015
Readers 3