Devoney Looser's Blog, page 12
November 4, 2015
November 04th, 2015
Here's the cover for our forthcoming book! It was revealed today by our fabulous publisher, Valancourt Books. Our edition of Jane West's A Gossip's Story (1796)--a probable source text for Jane Austen's Sense and Sensibility--will be out December 15th. (In the meantime, send me some creative, enticing Janeite stocking-stuffer sentences to use in the publicity materials?)

Published on November 04, 2015 13:28
October 19, 2015
Me and My Shadow CV in Chronicle
"What would my CV look like if it recorded not just the successes of my professional life but also the many, many rejections?" Check it out in today's
Chronicle of Higher Education.

Published on October 19, 2015 23:15
October 14, 2015
"Mr Darcy Through the Ages" in The Independent
Jane Austen's Mr. Darcy, hot or not? Check out my piece in The Independent, "Mr. Darcy Through the Ages, to learn more about his history, from receding hairline to heartthrob, on the 20th anniversary of Pride and Prejudice's Wet White Shirt day.

Published on October 14, 2015 07:15
October 13, 2015
“Top 10 Ways That Being A Writer Is Like Playing Roller Derby,” 3 min. video in Superstition Review
Getting to make a three-minute video essay about being a writer, wearing roller derby gear, and counting it as work? Life is good. Thanks for the invitation and inspiration, Superstition Review!

Published on October 13, 2015 20:18
October 10, 2015
Jane Austen in Paradise
I'm so wishing I were there in Louisville this weekend, at the Annual General Meeting of the Jane Austen Society of North America. At least I have the JASNA AGM in October 2017 in Huntington Beach, CA to look forward to! I'll be a plenary speaker at that meeting, along with Chawton House Library Director Gillian Dow and Austen descendant Richard Knight. (Thanks to Angela Crovetti for snapping this pic and sharing it.) The bicentenary of Austen's death--er, immortality--will be celebrated in 2017, so if you aren't a member of JASNA yet, this is definitely the right time to join.

Published on October 10, 2015 07:29
October 2, 2015
"Jane Austen, Illustrated" in The London Magazine
I've just published an essay, "Jane Austen, Illustrated," in The London Magazine in its October/November 2015 issue. http://www.thelondonmagazine.org/tlm-current-issue/?issue=october-november-2015
(The content is behind a paywall, but your $5 or some similar amount in pounds for an electronic copy would help support a great magazine!)
If you aren't sure if you want to splurge, I'll tease you with some of the gory details. I’ve discovered that Jane Austen’s previously unidentified first English illustrator was a proto-Van Wilder, whose wide-eyed, dark-and-stormy-night images for her books influenced generations of readers and probably came from a personally dark place. The artist, Ferdinand Pickering (1810-1889), responded to a brother who stabbed their mother in the face and neck over breakfast and had another brother who was a convicted bigamist. (That may go some distance toward explaining why Pickering's images of Austen's characters emphasize female and family conflict..)
His images also show Austen's characters in costumes from his own time, the 1830s, which I suspect contributed to Austen's being imagined as a Victorian novelist. Pickering himself became a life student at the Royal Academy Schools. His illustrations for Austen’s novels, published in 1833, ended up being his most notable work, reprinted into the 1890s, long after he'd dwindled into total obscurity.
This essay is part of material I'm working on for my in-progress book, The Making of Jane Austen, under contract to Johns Hopkins University Press. Stay tuned for more Austen afterlife news!
(The content is behind a paywall, but your $5 or some similar amount in pounds for an electronic copy would help support a great magazine!)
If you aren't sure if you want to splurge, I'll tease you with some of the gory details. I’ve discovered that Jane Austen’s previously unidentified first English illustrator was a proto-Van Wilder, whose wide-eyed, dark-and-stormy-night images for her books influenced generations of readers and probably came from a personally dark place. The artist, Ferdinand Pickering (1810-1889), responded to a brother who stabbed their mother in the face and neck over breakfast and had another brother who was a convicted bigamist. (That may go some distance toward explaining why Pickering's images of Austen's characters emphasize female and family conflict..)
His images also show Austen's characters in costumes from his own time, the 1830s, which I suspect contributed to Austen's being imagined as a Victorian novelist. Pickering himself became a life student at the Royal Academy Schools. His illustrations for Austen’s novels, published in 1833, ended up being his most notable work, reprinted into the 1890s, long after he'd dwindled into total obscurity.
This essay is part of material I'm working on for my in-progress book, The Making of Jane Austen, under contract to Johns Hopkins University Press. Stay tuned for more Austen afterlife news!


Published on October 02, 2015 12:09