Tuesday, February 12, 2019
Jane Austens Life and Work Essay -- Author Biography
Jane Austen, one of the most celebrated novelists, wrote seven of the most distinguished novels in the English language. Her first novel--which she started in 1795, revise in 1809 or 1810, and finally published in 1811was Sense and Sensibility. many a nonher(prenominal) agree that her most renowned employment would be Pride and Prejudice. Austen began composition in her early twenties but did not publish her work until later in her life. She obtained a better education than most women of her time. born(p) in Steventon Village in Hampshire on December 16, 1775, Austen was born into an upper middle class family. She was the daughter of George Austen, a clergyman, and Cassandra Austen. Austen received her education at Reading Abby School. Before she was eighteen Austen had written three volumes of juvenilia and her first prevail was published at the age of thirty-five. Pride and Prejudice, originally titled scratch Impressions, was submitted to a London newspaper publis her by her father in 1797, a year after Austen began writing it. Although the novel was enjoyed by many of her friends and family, the publisher rejected it. She locomote to Bath in 1801 and continued to work on First Impressions until 1805 when her father and a close friend passed away in which time she stopped writing for almost five years. In 1809 Austen moved to Hampshire at Chawton College, close to her hometown of Steventon and on January 28, 1813 Pride and Prejudice was published unknownly. Austens novels be about people of her societal class on lawsuit and marriage and throughout her life there were approximately fifteen anonymous reviews, three on Pride and Prejudice. James Edward Austen-Leigh, Austens nephew, wrote her first register in 1870 portraying her as a benevolent, devout, spin... ...te, clever, pointed, and satirical to say the least.Jane Austens Emma relates to her life in the fact that she writes about the people in her societal class. All of her cha racters live near the area she grew up in and are all upper middle class families. In Emma George Knightley is often the piece of Austen herself. He relays her opinions and emotions in a subtle way that does not exempt the reader too much. While relaying her opinions and emotions through a character at bottom the novel, it keeps the reader involved enough to keep their emotions within the story and not towards Austen herself. Works CitedCollins, K K. Austen, Jane. World Book Student. World Book Student. Web. 4 Jan. 2011.Gale Student Resources in Context. N.p., n.d. Web. 4 Jan. 2011.Hodge, J.A., et al. Jane Austen. Columbia Encyclopedia. EBSCOhost. Web. 4 Jan. 2011.
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