Jane Austen’s Lasting Influence on Writing and on Modern Perceptions

pp1-300x225As we celebrate Jane Austen in modern settings this month, I thought it prudent to examine what makes “our” Jane so popular. Austen’s influence proves that the past is always in the process of being reinvented. There have been over 300 continuations, retellings, adaptations, and sequels to Austen’s works.

Ian Watt’s Rise of the Novel, the author says Austen combines the internal and external approaches to character, and she has authenticity without diffuseness or trickery.  Austen offers a sense of social order, which is not achieved at the expense of individuality and autonomy of the characters.

As we all know, Austen conveys life stories, which are small, but perfect. Her subjects are common, ordinary families. Austen sees things as they are and as they ought to be. Her happy endings translate the heroine’s moral assets into material ones.

So, what are some characteristics of Austen that are easily translated into modern times?

Theme/Plot/Style

**   Jane Austen wrote about the mundane, interior lives of deliberately prosaic characters.

**   Austen’s stories are filled with strong irony and rigorous social critique.

**   The ironic take on society is delivered in a reassuring, sisterly voice.

**   Her works deal with the believable, timeless obstacles of class, money, and misunderstandings, which make her works adaptable to any era.

**   Austen’s witty, satirical approach to her subjects resonates with contemporary readers.

**   Jane Austen looks at society through a comedic screen, examining the problems of a male dominated society.

**    Jane Austen’s novels focus on personal conduct and that within a complex system of estates, incomes, and social position, personal conduct is seen to create a bridge between private moral order and social order.

**    “Family” is the building block of society.

**    Subject matter is universal.

**    Focuses on themes that never die: marriage; social pressure; generation gap.

**    Ordinary people can have interesting lives.

**    Her novels focus on the tenuous position of women who accept the fact that they must marry in order to achieve social acceptance.

**    Adaptations of Jane Austen’s novels hold a mirror to our own society – Jane Austen’s keen analysis of the vicissitudes of class.

Female Characters

**   The reader is presented with a protagonist whose life and social position was similar to her own.

**   Austen’s women are women of sense; they embody the notion of rational love.

**   Her characters speak to what we were, what we are, and what we want to be.

Male Characters

**   Courtship offers the hero a paradoxical challenge in that he must follow normalizing rules of public behavior in order to create uniquely personal emotional connections.

**  The visual text escapes Austen’s verbal control and encourages her audience to interpret it.

**   Modern readers appreciate the male hero’s displaying his struggle to achieve emotional expression, which will bring him into balance. He physically displays the emotions that he cannot speak.

**   We create “masculine balance” according to our own emotion-based criteria, while Austen creates our ideas of masculinity. Her characters’ internal contradictions become harmonized.

(These remarks are a consolidation of years of study and various resources.)

About Regina Jeffers

Regina Jeffers is the award-winning author of Austenesque, Regency and historical romantic suspense.
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