Among the Janeites A journey through the world of Jane Austen fandom

Deborah Yaffe, 1965-

Book - 2013

Looks at the culture that exists among devoted followers of Jane Austen, detailing the hidden subtext in the author's novels and the varied people they have inspired.

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Subjects
Published
Boston : Mariner Books/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2013.
Language
English
Main Author
Deborah Yaffe, 1965- (-)
Item Description
"A Mariner Original."
Physical Description
xxvi, 245 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780547757735
  • The tarot of Jane Austen
  • In Jane Austen's footsteps. Dressing the part
  • Walking where Jane walked
  • Sandy's Pemberley
  • Rereading, rewriting. Writing Mr. Darcy
  • The knowledge business
  • The Jane Austen code
  • Austen therapy
  • The company of clever, well-informed people. Talking Jane
  • Jane.net
  • The Tribe
  • The novels of Jane Austen.
Review by New York Times Review

every few years, I reread a Jane Austen novel, and I'm not alone, according to "Among the Janeites," Deborah Yaffe's playful exploration of Austen obsession. In fact, if I were a true Janeite, I'd be handstitching my empire-waisted gown and perfecting my country dancing, and I'd enjoy it, as Yaffe does when she decides to go ah out for a Jane Austen Society of North America (Jasna) convention. What I might not enjoy are the members' competing opinions about who Jane was and what she would be thinking about every little issue, personal and political. And the Janeites are not all women: Yaffe interviews quite a few men. Perhaps the most peculiar is Arnie Perlstein, a conspiracy theorist convinced that Austen buried in her apparently conventional novels a "radical critique of 19th-century patriarchy" that he has "spentmore than 15,000 completely uncompensated hours devising." Other Janeites don't need compensation. Among the most fascinating is Sandy Lerner, one of the founders of Cisco Systems who, along with her boyfriend-then-husband-now-ex-husband, gave you the router that allows you to sit up in bed and read this review on your computer screen. After Lerner sold her stake in Cisco, she bought and refurbished Chawton House, where Jane's brother Edward Austen Knight lived, and where (in the nearby village of Chawton) Jane herself spent the last eight years of her life. Lerner then installed a large library of women's literature written between 1600 and 1830 in Chawton House and opened it for study by students and scholars. Yaffe's tone is light but precise. Her "journey through the world of Jane Austen fandom" is amusing and sometimes mindboggling. Every avid devotee has her or his very own Jane, whether secretly abused or coolly observant or a revolutionary in disguise. One fan Yaffe meets is the scholar Devoney Looser, author of "The Making of Jane Austen." Looser goes to Jasna conferences and participates in Janeite projects, but what she's really interested in is how the Jane Austen whose books were first published simply as "by a Lady" became the ubiquitous cultural presence she is today. Looser begins by asserting that "she was not born, but rather became, Jane Austen," which might have been a surprise to the Lady, given the self-confident wit and psychological perceptiveness of her novels. What Looser is actually after is what has led to Janeite-ism. To this end, she offers a good survey of the landscape of books in the 19 th century: how they were presented to buyers and readers, how they were illustrated, which authors were popular and why. If the chapters on illustrators suffer, it's only because Looser gives us too few examples to view. (She does point out that for much of the 19 th century Austen's characters were portrayed by illustrators as contemporaries of their readers; it wasn't until roughly 70 years after Austen's death that the characters depicted in the novels began wearing Regency gowns.) The first few chapters of "The Making of Jane Austen" plod forward in their perhaps necessary way, but the second half, where Looser discusses the various groups that attached themselves to Austen's works and saw themselves in Austen's works, especially at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20 th, is energetic and revealing. On the one hand, the members of traditional London men's clubs adored Austen because they felt that they alone had the discernment to appreciate her (conservative) politics and literary nuance. On the other, suffragists, both overt and covert, claimed her as their own. Looser writes particularly vividly of a huge demonstration on a hot and windy day in June 1908 when 1,000 marchers, part of a crowd of 10,000, carried heavy silk banners bearing the names of important women (among the authors were not only Jane Austen but Mary Wollstonecraft and Elizabeth Barrett Browning) on their way to the Royal Albert Hall. Looser also discusses how academia has treated Austen and how her novels have been taught in schools, partly by means of textbooks that have excerpted, cut and manipulated her work. One of Looser's most amusing illustrations is from the October 1971 issue of National Lampoon ("Jane Austen. Isn't that the kind of cupcake they used to sell at the A.&P.?"), which makes fun of those who have avoided English literature courses. But it's Paula Byrne's "The Genius of Jane Austen" that gives us the most insightful analysis of the making of the Austen legacy. Byrne's investigation into Austen's enjoyment of plays during a period when theater was both popular and lucrative and when playwrights and actors were questioning and mocking social norms (especially those dictating male/female relationships) gives us real insight into how Austen learned to focus her material, make it amusing and give it critical punch. Byrne's knowledge of Austen's life and letters, of her family connections (her older brother Henry's "unflagging interest in the theater" gave her many opportunities to go to plays because he lived in London), allows Byrne to portray an engaged and active literary artist, looking for ways to shape her material, carefully choosing her settings and subjects. At the same time, Byrne demonstrates her own ample knowledge of the history of the English theater. The illustrations she has included are colorful and instructive - I especially like the etching of Robert Elliston, Austen's favorite comic actor, who doesn't look anything like Colin Firth. Byrne's most important point is that Austen had her own theory of human behavior, that she understood that in early-19th-century England social classes were carefully defined but also shifting, both in London and in the countryside. Thus an intelligent Austen character would understand that in order to negotiate the boundaries and still attain true connection, not to mention respectability and moral worth, he (or especially she) would have to do some role playing, keep some secrets, watch what others were doing. Attending plays influenced Austen's work, but also her ideas about life itself. She exploited the capacity of the novel as a form to show her characters from inside and out, a skill, perhaps the skill, that gives her such consistent and wide appeal. The Austen novel I chose this year was "Emma." Thanks to Paula Byrne, I now readily see that the amusement Austen is giving me (and herself) in the rambling, self-serving monologues of Mrs. Elton, the deceptive interactions of Frank Churchill and Jane Fairfax, and the playful upending of class-based snobbery in Emma herself was inspired by plays Austen knew well and techniques she saw on the stage. Austen was in her late 30 s when she was writing "Emma," her fourth published novel, about the same age as Alice Munro when she was pulling together the stories in "Lives of Girls and Women," or Virginia Woolf when she was composing "Jacob's Room." Janeite that I am, I can only wish Austen had lived long enough to write 12 more works of fiction, like Munro, or at least six more, like Woolf. ? Members of London men's clubs felt they alone had the discernment to appreciate her literary nuance. jane smiley's most recent book is "Golden Age," the third volume of the Last Hundred Years trilogy.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [July 30, 2017]
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

It is a truth universally acknowledged that Jane Austen is a global brand, but can an individual's love for Austen and the society of educated people who appreciate her for the "right reasons" (biting irony and insight into the human condition) survive the twin threats of mass popularity and crass commercialism? In her first book, a lively and insightful celebration of big-tent Austen fandom, former journalist Jaffe shows that a reader's love of Austen can survive, thrive, and blossom despite the hoopla. According to Yaffe, "Austenmania's Big Bang" was the shot of Colin Firth (as Mr. Darcy) in a clingy wet shirt in the 1995 BBC production of Pride and Prejudice. Predominately white, female, and middle-aged, the "Janeite" crew includes evangelical Christians who value Austen's moral clarity, secular feminists who relate to Austen's life as a single woman, Regency culture buffs, and eccentrics, including one Florida lawyer whose "Grand Unified Theory of Everything Jane Austen" suggests that Emma is a gothic tale of patriarchal abuse. Yaffe, who is "happiest when curled up alone with Persuasion," gamely dons period costume, studies country dancing, and dives into Austen fan fiction to research this subculture. Her Austen is a coolly objective observer with high standards-a plausible version, Yaffe comes to understand, of her own ideal self. Agent: Jenni Ferrari-Adler, Union Literary. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A witty expedition into the wilds of Austen City Limits, where there's no such thing as being too obsessed with the author of Pride and Prejudice. Although barely known in her lifetime, the works of Jane Austen (17751817) were so popular within a century of her death that the term "Janeite" was coined to describe a devoted fan. Yaffe (Other People's Children: The Battle for Justice and Equality in New Jersey's Schools, 2007) explores the dimensions of modern Jane-o-mania, her own included. There's the Jane Austen Society of North America, whose members (Yaffe among them) spend months acquiring just the right Regency gown for the annual gala. There are regular visitors to the Republic of Pemberley website who argue the finer points of Mansfield Park well into the wee hours. We meet Cisco Systems co-founder Sandy Lerner, who spent $20 million of her buyout money on the purchase and renovation of Austen's Chawton House in England. We also meet readers who simply love the stories, fan-fiction writers (some quite successful) who indulge them, and serious academics who loathe both. On the other extreme are people who read too much between the lines, like the full-time explicator who sees every Austen novel as a labyrinth of subtle clues, disclosing a "shadow story" of family abuse beneath the surface romance. Others similarly create Austen in their own image: A nurse practitioner sees "borderline personality disorder" in the female characters; a speech pathologist thinks Mr. Darcy has mild autism. For Yaffe and others, there's a constant tug of war between sharing Jane with the world and keeping her for one's self. Yaffe honors her hero throughout: a smart reader and a shrewd but sympathetic judge of character who knows that Austenophilia has its own laws of attraction.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 Dressing the Part The bottom drawers of Baronda Bradley's dresser are filled to overflowing with kid gloves, ballet slippers, stockings, feathers, lace collars, nineteenth-century coins, smelling salts, period playing cards, drawstring reticules, a vintage sewing kit--all the accessories with which she augments the breathtaking Regency outfits she wears to each year's Annual General Meeting of the Jane Austen Society of North America. A walk-in closet holds her thirty size 6 gowns--the green-and-orange with striped silk overlay, which premiered in Seattle in 2001; the flowered silk brocade day dress, from Los Angeles in 2004; the square-necked, pale-pink georgette with hand-embroidered bodice; the dark red with cutout sleeves and matching long velvet coat; the lace-and-silk confection so daringly low-cut that, at the Vancouver ball in 2007, she armed her friends with a code word ("Shakespeare!") to deploy if they noticed a hint of areola peeking out. By mid-2011, when I visited Baronda at the ranch house in Fort Worth, Texas, that she shares with three children, two cats, and a large boa constrictor named Honeybun, she had become a near-icon of the JASNA AGM--"Baronda of the two thousand dresses," as she had been dubbed at Milwaukee in 2005. She was hardly the only person to attend the AGM in period attire--many dressed up for the Saturday night ball, and some also wore bonnets or morning dresses to the daytime lectures and discussions--but Baronda took JASNA costuming to a completely different level. In 2004, seven years after her first AGM, she had begun wearing Regency outfits not only throughout every moment of the conference but even en route, from the minute she left home until the minute she returned several days later. Wearing her bonnet onto the airplane was easier than finding space for it in a suitcase, and besides, she liked the stir she caused strolling through the airport in a floor-length, Empire-waist day dress. In her elegant gowns and headdresses, she felt different. "I'm no longer the usual mom, out there playing soccer or being graceless," she says. "I know that as soon as I step out the door, I'm on display, and people are watching." For JASNA conference regulars, anticipating Baronda's new outfit had become part of the familiar yearly ritual. It hadn't always been this way. Back in 1983, when I attended my first JASNA conference, the Saturday night program featured a sober lecture on Emma delivered by a distinguished Jane Austen scholar. No one cleared away the tables after the banquet so we could promenade through English country dances in high-waisted gowns, feathered turbans, and opera-length gloves. Not until the early-twenty-first century did a Regency ball, period costumes optional, become a regular feature of JASNA's AGM. But over the years, perhaps influenced by the visions of silk and lace in all those Austen movies, more and more people began dressing the part. Even the men, rare birds at a JASNA AGM, were squiring their be-gowned wives and girlfriends in cutaway coats, knee breeches, and brocade waistcoats. These days, a costume parade through the streets surrounding the conference hotel, with bystanders snapping cell-phone pictures of dressed-up Janeites, often preceded the dancing. My reaction to these developments could be summed up in a single sentence: I will not be caught dead wearing a period costume to a Jane Austen ball. I have always had a vexed relationship with clothes. I find shopping at best dull, at worst depressing--a recurrent reminder of how far my real-life body diverges from the ideal. I buy off-the-rack separates in dependable solid colors, own as few shoes as possible, and accessorize so rarely that when I had my ears pierced for the first time on my fortieth birthday, my brother dubbed this uncharacteristic fit of eccentricity my "midlife crisis." Playing dress-up in costume is just as unappealing to me. As a child, I never much liked Halloween; the sugar rush couldn't fully redeem the weeks of angst over what to wear. As for the adults who attended the JASNA ball in Regency attire--well, I was quite sure I was Not That Kind of Jane Austen fan. Yes, Baronda looked stunning in her many gowns, but to me dressing up seemed the province of the goofy, nostalgic types who were ready to trade modern life, with its antibiotics and feminism, for some imagined ideal of elegant living. And yet, one spring day, there I was on eBay, searching for Jane Austen-style Regency gowns. How did I get here? I wondered helplessly, as I rejected the "1960s--VELVET--brown--BABYDOLL--Jane AUSTEN--Hippie--Dress," which appeared to be so short that even Elizabeth Bennet's wild sister, Lydia, would have hesitated to wear it in public. The answer, of course, was research for that book the Jane Austen tarot cards had urged me to write. If I was going to discover what made my fellow Janeites tick, if I was going to experience the Janeite world in all its glorious diversity, I would have to immerse myself in aspects of the fandom that had never appealed to me. Interviewing Baronda of the two thousand dresses wouldn't be enough. I would have to overcome a lifetime of resistance to dress-up and wear a Regency gown to the JASNA ball. And with that ball less than six months away, I couldn't dither much longer. Baronda Bradley wasn't used to being admired for her appearance. Growing up in a lower-middle-class family in a small town near Fort Worth, she often felt invisible, or out of place. Her parents, who had blended their first names, Ron and Barbara, to create hers, exacted harsh discipline at the end of a belt. "They were very much 'spare the rod, spoil the child' people," Baronda says. Saddled young with adult responsibilities for her two younger brothers and for the children who used her mother's in-home babysitting service, Baronda felt more comfortable with adults than with her peers. She sang, played the piano, excelled in school, and developed consuming interests that she stoked with intensive research. She read everything in the house--her father's car books, her mother's dog books, whatever was stacked on the top shelf of her closet. One summer, she checked out every one of the public library's books on cats. She was the smart girl, and the smart girl doesn't get to be the pretty girl. With no college-going tradition in her family and no money for tuition, Baronda knew she would have to make her own way. When she earned scholarships that would help pay her costs at the University of Texas, the congregants in the conservative Southern Baptist church her family attended were torn: some feared she would lose her way in the den of iniquity that was Austin, Texas, but others envisioned their bright girl, with her gift for languages, making a wonderful missionary's wife. At college, Baronda studied psychology and French and played percussion in the band. Gradually, she drifted away from the no-drinking, no-dancing, submit-to-your-husband values she had grown up with. And she worked, paying the costs her scholarships didn't cover with earnings from an array of different jobs. Eventually, she was working twenty to thirty hours a week. It was all too much--the long hours at work, the academic course load, the depression that began to creep over her as she confronted the emotional fallout from her childhood. In more than one course, she squandered good grades when she fell into a funk and skipped the final exam. After three and a half years in college, her GPA was so low that she was on academic probation. Her college boyfriend was already attending medical school, and she decided to drop out, join him in Galveston, and get married. She started therapy and took a job as a 911 dispatcher, sending ambulances and police cars to emergencies and fielding less-than-urgent calls from lonely people who just wanted to talk. Her coworkers were smart and capable, but none of them had aspired to this job; their lives, like hers, had somehow veered off track. "That was what helped me to determine I needed to go back and get my degree, or I'd be around people who were underachievers all my life," Baronda says. She went back to school, finishing with a major in French and minors in psychology and classical civilizations. Reading and writing, she realized, were what she most enjoyed. When her husband's training took them to Indianapolis, Baronda found a diverse, intellectual Methodist church to attend, took a day job with a software company, and began studying for a graduate degree in English at night school. A professor recommended Jane Austen. Baronda's Jane Austen was a swift, ironical satirist, a writer who could sketch a character in one or two tart, definitive sentences. In Persuasion , whose heroine gets the chance to reverse a life-changing, long-regretted decision taken at the behest of a family friend, Baronda found an added resonance, a reflection of her own journey from the constricting world of her childhood to the greater freedom she had begun to find in college. "It's the story of being told one thing and making choices around that, but then being given an opportunity to exercise your own desires," she says. "Kind of like my life." Despite my eBay frustrations, I figured it couldn't be that hard to find a Regency gown. Jane Austen managed it, and she didn't have the Internet. The post-Firth upsurge of interest in Austen's life and works has carved a niche for merchants selling everything from reticules to spencers (or, for the uninitiated, from drawstring purses to short buttoned jackets), and on the World Wide Web, every Janeite cottage entrepreneur can find a home and a customer base. Years before there was an Internet, Jennie Chancey was a teenager who started sewing her own clothes because she yearned to look like the title character in the Anne of Green Gables miniseries. In college, in the 1990s, her old-fashioned clothes earned her the nickname "the Anne girl," and she launched a small sewing business catering to young women with similar tastes. With the advent of the Internet, she took her company online, named it Sense and Sensibility Patterns, in tribute to the writer she loved, and began selling designs for Regency gowns to women who wanted to make their own. In an Austen-worthy irony, modern technology facilitated a return to a pre-industrial handcrafted aesthetic. By 2010, Chancey was selling as many as two hundred patterns a week and netting $20,000 to $30,000 a year. Although she sold patterns from other historical periods too, she estimated that 70 to 80 percent of her customers were Regency enthusiasts, many of them planning outfits for Jane Austen festivals or evenings of English country dance. Eventually, Chancey took more than a dozen of her customers on a summer tour of Austen sites in England. On the bus, they watched a movie version of Persuasion , pausing the DVD now and then to critique the costuming. "Somehow, putting on the clothing of the time lets you step into somebody else's experience," Chancey says. "And I think that's the experience that Jane Austenites are looking for--how can I step into Jane's period as much as is possible and just feel a little part of what it's like to be in the Regency." I certainly wasn't going to sew my own gown--reattaching lost buttons is about the extent of my expertise with needle and thread--but the whole Regency costume enterprise was turning out to be much more complicated than I had realized. Finding a gown, I had learned, was only half the battle; with Regency clothing, the big question is what lies beneath. The Regency silhouette features breasts pushed up to an impossible height--"the shelf look," it's called--and held there by a boned corset that laces up the back. Modern underwear that I'd never heard of (the balconette bra?--who knew?) could approximate the look, but only imperfectly. "It is impossible to achieve a historically accurate look without the proper corset or stays for your time period," one costume website lectured. "A proper corset will make the difference between looking like a princess who has stepped out of an historic painting or looking like someone on their way to a modern costume party." Of course, I was on my way to a modern costume party, but still, who wouldn't rather look like a princess? Luckily for me, the Regency corset wasn't meant to achieve a Scarlett O'Hara-style eighteen-inch waist--that look became fashionable later in the nineteenth century--but it was still hard to imagine actually wearing this bizarre and probably uncomfortable undergarment, especially since I didn't employ a lady's maid who could help me into it on the night of the ball. I imagined wandering half-dressed through the halls of the conference hotel, looking for a sympathetic Janeite to lace me up before the clock struck midnight and my coach turned back into a pumpkin. Were there period-correct alternatives? Several costumers told me about so-called short stays, which resemble a sports bra and were rumored to be fairly comfortable. But when I investigated further, I learned that short stays were recommended for the young and slender, a category that most definitely did not include me. Rebecca Morrison-Peck, a Janeite costumer from Vancouver, Washington, mentioned the boned-bodice petticoat, a historically accurate undergarment that you could, just barely, put on by yourself. "It's buttoned at the top of the back very, very tightly, and you can pull it around and button it in the front and then swing it round and squeeze your arms in the very tight little straps," Morrison-Peck said. "I've done it, and it's like a monkey with a deck chair. It's not a pretty sight." All right, I told myself. The corset is out. The balconette bra is in. But after a few dispiriting hours scrolling through websites I had never imagined visiting (Frederick's of Hollywood?), looking at come-hither pictures of models in low-cut satin push-up bras, I was depressed and dissatisfied. All these conversations with costumers; all these hours spent at websites with names like Austentation, window-shopping through pictures of seed-pearl hair combs and cameo brooches; all this talk of stepping into the Regency experience: it had done something to me. If I'm going to do this, I might as well do it right, I found myself thinking. The corset was back in. In fact, I realized, I was becoming slightly obsessed with corsets. I seemed to be working them into every conversation. At lunch one day, I told my husband about how proper Regency eveningwear called for breasts elevated practically to chin level and necklines low enough to display show-stopping quantities of cleavage. His sudden enthusiasm for the corset project was startling. "What about stockings?" he asked. "You know I'm a stickler for historical accuracy." Historical accuracy, I was learning, doesn't come cheap. Whereas even custom-made Regency gowns could be had for perhaps $150, made-to-measure corsets ran $200 or more. And which company should I order from? One website seemed on the less expensive side, but could I bear to patronize a merchant who spelled Jane Austen's last name with an "i"? I could splurge on a $375 corset, but that site featured a testimonial from Madonna's stylist, which seemed way out of my league. I wasn't planning to wear just the corset, after all. With five months to go until the ball, I had to make up my mind. Until I had the underwear, I couldn't get the gown, since achieving the Regency shelf look would change my measurements. One day in May, I took a deep breath and ordered the "1815 corset" from an online company called the Very Merry Seamstress. It cost $260, plus another $20 for the shipping. I hadn't spent this much on a dress since my wedding, and this wasn't even the dress. In October 1997, Baronda Bradley was a graduate student in English who needed academic credentials to fatten her résumé. She prepared a presentation on Jane Austen and the British landscape painter J.M.W. Turner and headed off to JASNA's AGM in San Francisco. She'd heard that people sometimes dressed in costume, so she rented a beige satin gown for the ball and spent the evening dancing with an acquaintance. Neither of them knew much about English country dancing; they would barely master the steps for one dance before it was time to start another. That weekend, Baronda noticed a couple who dressed up throughout the conference, in both day- and eveningwear. "I thought it was elegant and graceful, and I admired that there were these people who didn't care that they were doing something different, because I was already of that mindset anyway," she says. "And so I just thought, 'Well, that looks kind of fun. Maybe next year I'll have a couple of pieces.'" But it would be four years before she went to another AGM. In the interim, she and her husband moved back to Fort Worth and had two sons. Baronda worked for a while, stayed home with her kids for a while, and went back to school, thinking she might pursue a doctorate in English. When she finally had time for another JASNA conference, she turned to the Internet, finding a seamstress in Colorado who produced three new dresses for the 2001 Seattle AGM: a red-and-white day dress with a matching spencer, an ice-blue satin afternoon gown, and an elegant green silk. Slender and well-proportioned, with long blond hair that held a curl, Baronda looked every inch the Regency belle, and she drew compliments wherever she went. After a lifetime as the smart girl, she was suddenly the beautiful girl. "It was like I was Cinderella," she says. "It was like I was the homecoming queen, and they had me leading the ball." The next year, she decided, she would have to wear something even more spectacular. Excerpted from Among the Janeites: A Journey Through the World of Jane Austen Fandom by Deborah Yaffe All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.