Jane Austen discussion

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Sense and Sensibility
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Why chapter two?
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I think we need a chart to summarise!!! :)

2)Jane used a lot of family names or royal names. Frederick was one of the royal Dukes
Jane= herself
Elizabeth = Jane's sister-in-law, Elizabeth Bridges/niece
Fanny = Fanny Austen-Knight, Jane's niece, daughter of Elizabeth and James Austen (later Austen-Knight)
George=Jane's father and brother/King/Prince of Wales
Henry= Jane's favorite brother, a bit of a rogue
Charles= Jane's youngest brother/nephew
Marianne= niece
William = nephew
Frederick = Duke of York
Charlotte= Queen/Princess Royal
There is a book Jane Austen and Names and another Jane Austen's Names: Riddles, Persons, Places.
Darcy I believe comes from the Norman D'arcy. Fitzwilliam is interesting because fitz means false, often used for royal illegitimate sons... perhaps one of his ancestors was an illegitimate son of William the Conqueror?

Thank you for the links provided.
As for making up names in the UK, well, the famous one is Wendy, which comes, from what I read, from J M Barrie's Peter Pan, and there is another famous one, Shirley, which is a town, I think, somewhere 'up north', which Charlotte Bronte used for her eponymous heroine. (Shirley has gone right out of fashion now - it used to be popular in my youth.)
These days, sigh, 'made up' names are becoming increasingly common, but they are VERY 'low class'!!!!!! It's almost a given that anyone with a made up name is NOT 'from the best circles'.....
In fact, there was a teacher a while back who got into trouble in the press and social media for writing that when she gets her class list at the beginning of the academic year she can immediate 'place' her students according to their names.
As ever in Britain, class infiltrates almost everywhere, and we just LOVE classifying people on every and every ground possible! From what they call napkins/serviettes, to what their first names are - and, most of all, of course, how they pronounce the English language! It's our national obsession!


Ditto for peircings!
Ewww!

The Hispanic (Latino?) (apols, but as a Brit I'm not sure what the difference, if any, is?) ones were pretty easy to identify ecause they were so obviously Spanish in style, eg, often ended in 'ez' or 'esa' etc!), but it was less easy to see which ones were likely to be from Black communities (Afro-American, is that the right term?) (In the UK, we tend to say 'Afro-Caribbean', and subsume all 'non-Caucasians' as BAME - Black, Asian and Middle Eastern) (it's a bit of a minefield, for obvious reasons, as no one wishes to give offence, even inadvertently, as a recent spat over whether 'coloured' is pejorative but 'person of colour' is not, plus of course the terms that are acceptable/non-acceptable change over time - definitely a minefield).
However, what struck me most was the identification of what the article called 'the whitest names'.....they were very Germanic.
Add to that the fact that names go in and out of fashion with the generations, and it can get pretty complicated!

White names can be any ethnicity at all. I live in a mill city and many French-Canadian immigrants came to work in the mills. They spoke French and maintained their identities. Irish workers came to work in the mills and elsewhere during the potato famine and Italians came during the turn-of-the-20th-century. A lot of Southeast Asians, many Latinx, and Israeli Jews have come more recently. Where I live, it's unusual to see names like Smith, Jones, etc. I do have relatives named Smith. They're from the South but they identify more with their mother's Italian heritage.
In the Midwest you have a lot of Scandinavians and Germans. Everyone from the East coast went West on wagon trains, the Transcontinental Railroad in the 19th century.

I do feel, somewhat sadly, that with modern mass culture (ie, film/tv/social media etc), there is increasing influence from that, rather than from one's own families, so it's getting harder to see 'lines of descent' so to speak from family names, than it used to be.
In a way, though, that 'obscuring of origins' is countered by the development of DNA testing, so that we can, irrespective of names/family history and even 'visible appearance' get an amazing insight into our 'invisible history' in our DNA.
I have a friend who gave her Jewish husband a kit, and it turns out he is 100% Ashkenazi Jew.....absolutely NO ONE in his family ever 'married out'!
PS - You say Latinx - I've not heard that term before - does it mean 'Hispanic-Latino' then? As in, anyone living in the Americas with any Spanish descent (either culturally or genetically?)


As ever 'outsiders to a group' (whoever the group and the outsiders are!!!), tend probably to 'over-homogenise' the group, without understanding or acknowledging the 'fine tuning' within a group. An example from the UK might be the 'outsider' assumption that all 'working class people' (and I'm not even going to attempt to define that!!!)(another minefield!) are 'Labour voters', whereas there are a significant number who are 'Tory voters', etc etc.
Perhaps the only 'constant' is that the one thing we know about humanity is that we seem to have an unquenchable desire to both form groups, and re-form them all over again quite differently! Hey ho!

Perhaps the only 'constant' is that the one thing we know about humanity is that we seem to have an unquenchable desire to both form groups, and re-form them all over again quite differently! Hey ho!."
I think this is something Jane Austen knew well and did so skillfully. She liked to play around poking fun at the construction of social class. She had good insight into human nature and that's why her books are so relatable 200 years later.
Books mentioned in this topic
Jane Austen and Names (other topics)Jane Austen's Names: Riddles, Persons, Places (other topics)
Lady Susan (other topics)
The Watsons (other topics)
Sanditon (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Hannah More (other topics)Frances Burney (other topics)
Walter Scott (other topics)
Rudyard Kipling (other topics)
Paula Byrne (other topics)
'Kitty' in P&P would also be 'K/Catherine' in full.
Thinking about first names a bit more, it's also striking that there are a good few characters that we know only by their surnames! I don't think we ever find out what Mr and Mrs Bennet's first names are, do we?
To modern ears, it always sounds so weird that married people refer to each other by their surnames! I wonder when that finally went out of practice?
Another 'aural oddity' to us is saying 'my mother/father/aunt/uncle' etc when talking to another character who is also the daughter/niece etc! eg, Lizzy saying to Jane 'my mother's nerves....' (or whatever). These days we'd obviously say 'our mother's nerves'.....
It's as if Lizzie is implying that Jane has a different mother! Very odd.