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List Written by Jane Austen - Audio book performed by Juliet Stevenson - Unabridged Fiction - 14 COMPACT DISCS - 16 hours, 50 minutes Publisher, Naxos Audiobooks (September 2007) Listen to an MP3 interview with Juliet Stevenson. When timid, ten-year-old Fanny Price is plucked from her large, raucous and somewhat impoverished family in Portsmouth to live with wealthy relatives in Mansfield Park her life is changed for ever. Immediately forming a strong attraction for her cousin Edmund, she develops into a genteel and mature young woman, whose love for him remains undimmed despite the diversion brought into both their lives by the attractive but morally bankrupt Crawfords. With its suggestion of adultery, and written with all the wit and style of the mature Jane Austen, this is the work of a writer at the peak of her powers. It was published in 1814, and unlike its predecessors, Pride and Prejudice and Sense and Sensibility which were revisions of her juvenile writing, Mansfield Park was completely original. Like its heroine Fanny Price, who develops during the course of the story to reach maturity, Jane Austen’s third published novel was a much more mature work from a writer of increasing experience. About the Recording Having recorded most of Jane Austen in abridged during the early years of Naxos AudioBooks, Juliet Stevenson was eager to go back into the studio to record the work unabridged. The recording took five days spread over a couple of weeks as her film commitments intervened from time to time. But as producer/engineer Roy McMillan noted, she would settle back into the studio and start without hesitation from where she left off. Never was there a doubt about a character or a situation – this was a novel which she has known intimately and loved for many years. Though she lives a totally different life, busy with her family and her professional international career, Juliet has always felt a close affinity for the world of Jane Austen, or more correctly, the writer’s acute observation of her milieu.’ An Introduction to Mansfield Park By Helen Davies Jane Austen was born on 16 December 1775, the seventh child of the family. At that time, her father was Rector of the Hampshire village of Steventon, near Basingstoke. She became a well-educated young woman: together with her sister Cassandra she was sent to good boarding schools in her early years, before continuing her education at home with her father. By the time her first novel reached publication Jane was in her mid thirties, but in fact had already been writing for many years. Her earliest pieces, written when she was just a girl, were for the amusement and entertainment of her family, and she particularly enjoyed penning burlesques of popular romances. A History of England by a Partial, Prejudiced and Ignorant Historian was one of her early, unpublished works and suggests her natural gift for gentle irony, a style which is evident throughout Mansfield Park. Following the death of her father in 1805 Jane lived in Southampton, until, in 1809, with her mother and sister she moved to Chawton in Hampshire, to a home provided by her brother. Likewise, in Fanny Price, Jane creates a heroine who is dependant on the generosity of her relatives to provide her with a home at Mansfield Park. Here, she becomes increasingly fond of Edmund Bertram who, in becoming a clergyman, parallels Jane Austen’s father as well as two of her brothers. Morality in Regency England is closely examined in Mansfield Park. Jane Austen gives us Sir Thomas’s behaviour as an example of the traditional eighteenth century morality, whilst the start of early nineteenth century social conscience is exemplified by Fanny, and Regency England’s superficiality demonstrated in the Crawfords’ moral ambiguity. Another of the themes in Mansfield Park is that of growing up. Immature at the start of the story, we see Fanny’s development from a timid girl to a young woman who has acquired self-knowledge. This is achieved through her growing integration into the world of Mansfield Park and her experiences of relationships with Edmund Bertram and Henry Crawford. Indeed marriage forms another main theme of Mansfield Park. Jane Austen herself, however, never married. She was reputed to have had several romantic attachments, and did once receive a proposal of marriage from a wealthy Hampshire landowner. This she accepted, only to retract the following morning. Mansfield Park is structured in three parts. The first, which takes the story up to the non-production of the play, highlights Fanny and the group of individuals who form the cast, and with whom she does not mix. Fanny’s courtship by Henry Crawford is the focus for the second part, whilst her visit to Portsmouth and subsequent return to Mansfield Park form the final part. The story is told by a narrator who frequently sees through Fanny’s eyes, telling us her thoughts, and is written in Jane Austen’s typically precise and analytical style, with humour a marked feature. Jane Austen herself led a calm and unremarkable life. She was very modest about her gift for writing, describing her work as ‘...that little bit (two inches wide) of ivory, in which I work with so fine a brush as produces little effect after much labour’. She spent many years living in quiet, rural villages, though she did live for a while in fashionable, elegant Bath after her father retired in 1801. Chawton’s rural setting, where she was to spend the rest of her life, was much more pleasing to Jane, and her writing blossomed from this time. However, much of her life consisted of nothing more exciting than conversation, needlework and reading, with private dances or balls and occasional visits to fashionable seaside towns providing the only real highlights. It must be remembered that class distinctions were rigid at this time, and life for the upper classes was just as portrayed by Jane Austen, drawing on her own limited experience. Not surprisingly then Mansfield Park, presents us with a world which is remarkably similar to that of Jane Austen herself. Indeed she herself said that, ‘Three or four families in a country village is the very thing to work on.’ Jane Austen never wished to write about something of which she had no first-hand experience so there are scant references to significant events of the time, notably the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars. However, like Jane herself who had two brothers in the Navy, she does provide Fanny with a brother William, who is a Navy man and whose advancement Henry Crawford assists in order to win Fanny’s gratitude and admiration. Of Jane Austen’s other great novels Emma was published in 1816, and both Northanger Abbey and Persuasion in 1818. However, the dates of publication give no clues as to when these novels were actually written, as Northanger Abbey and Persuasion were, in fact, published posthumously by Jane’s brother Henry. He was the one to formally reveal her authorship since all four titles published in her lifetime were done so anonymously. By 1816 Jane Austen had become seriously ill. In May of that year she visited Cheltenham with her sister Cassandra, but the spa waters there offered little relief and in May 1817 she was taken to Winchester to be under the care of the best doctors. However, within two months of arriving there she died, on 18 July, at the age of 42. Not until the twentieth century did her works become established favourites when, according to some critics, her admirers were over-lavish in their praise. Nevertheless many today are of the opinion that Jane Austen is of the greatest of all English writers. About the Author: Jane Austen (1775–1817) - One of the greatest English novelists, Jane Austen was born December 16, 1775, at Steventon Rectory, Hampshire, her home for twenty-five years. She was the seventh of eight children, six of them boys, of whom, two rose to be admirals. Her father, who took pupils, gave her a better education than was common, then, for girls; she learned French and Italian and had a good acquaintance with English literature, her favourite authors being Richardson, Johnson, Crabbe, Cowper, and, later, Scott. She sang a few old ballads with much sweetness and was very dexterous with her needle. She grew up tall and remarkably graceful in person, with bright hazel eyes, fine features, rich colouring and beautiful brown curly hair. Her disposition was very sweet and charming, and she was an especial favourite with children, whom she used to delight with her long improvised stories. In her life there is a hint of an affection for a lover who died suddenly, but there is no trace of such a tragedy in her books, which are cheerful and wholesome throughout, free from anything morbid or bitter. In 1801 she went with her family to Bath, and after her father’s death in 1805, removed to Southampton, and later (1809) to Chawton near Alton. She had written stories from her childhood, but it was at Chawton that she first gave anything to the world. Four stories were published anonymously during her lifetime – Sense and Sensibility (1811), Pride and Prejudice (1813), Mansfield Park (1814) and Emma (1816). The first two works were written before she was more than two-and-twenty. Early in 1816 her health began to give way. In the May of 1817 she came for medical advice to Winchester, and here she died, July 18. She was buried in the cathedral. Northanger Abbey and Persuasion were published in 1818, when the authorship of the whole six was first acknowledged. Love and Friendship was published with other juvenilia in 1922; Sanditon, (unfinished) in 1925. About the Performer: Juliette Stevenson has worked extensively for the RSC, and the Royal National Theatre. She won an Olivier Award for her role in Death and the Maiden at the Royal Court, and a number of other awards for her work in the film Truly, Madly, Deeply. Other film credits include The Trial, Drowning by Numbers, and Emma. |
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