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Reading in the Regency Period
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I just joined and I have a question that has been lurking around in my mind for some time. In the Regency Era what did people read? I know in the Sense and Sensibility movie (with Emma Thompso..."
I should imagine that authors like Fanny Burney, Henry Fielding, Sir Walter Scott, and possibly Maria Edgeworth would have been relatively popular. I'd bet that some women (and men) probably read Mary Wollstonecraft (the mother of Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin, who later married Percy Bysshe Shelley).
Poets probably would have included Robert Burns, and the First Generation 'Romantics' like Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Blake; and maybe even some of the Second Generation Romantics like Keats, Byron, and Shelley.

I just joined and I have a question that has been lurking around in my mind for some time. In the Regency Era what did people read? I know in the Sense and Sensibility movie (with..."
Don't forget Ann Radcliffe! The Mysteries of Udolpho andThe Romance of the Forest are referred to in Northanger Abbey and Emma.

I just joined and I have a question that has been lurking around in my mind for some time. In the Regency Era what did people read? I know in the Sense and Se..."
Ye Gods! However did I forget Radcliffe; or what about Matthew Lewis's The Monk, a total creep-fest! Good catch, Alicia!

I bet there were a lot of books that we don't know about because they were garbage. I always wonder what they are reading too. People like to speculate what Anna Karenina is reading on the train.


Truth be known, Elena, I think it kinda was. I think it was considered kind of risque and over-the-top. I suppose folks then looked at Udolpho the same way that some look at the 'bodice-rippers' of today.
Elena wrote: "Thanks for all the info, everyone! I remember The Mysteries of Udolpho, etc. from Northanger Abbey, but I thought that was considered trash?"
I suppose Udolpho would have gathered differing opinions just as books do today. We have batted around the subject here on this group as to whether Austen was putting the Gothic novel down or if she was bringing it out in good fun but with a little respect.
In reading a portion of Udolpho and the literary essays about it, I wouldn't term it trash in the modern day. It actually has a storyline (ha ha) and some pretty valid literary qualities.
I suppose Udolpho would have gathered differing opinions just as books do today. We have batted around the subject here on this group as to whether Austen was putting the Gothic novel down or if she was bringing it out in good fun but with a little respect.
In reading a portion of Udolpho and the literary essays about it, I wouldn't term it trash in the modern day. It actually has a storyline (ha ha) and some pretty valid literary qualities.


I hope no one thought that I was considering Udolpho trash? I was simply speculating on how Ms. Radcliffe's novel may have been perceived in the day. I don't think I would ever re-read it again either; but I'm glad I did read it.

It is kinda fun to think about Jane Austen reading in the way future. Thanks for that point, Alicia. And Christopher, I thought you were referring to trash reading in the most positive way possible. ha ha
I would say most people with a good bit of reading experience wouldn't be offended by someone using the word trash about even their favorite books. I read romantic suspense growing up that I know were called trash, and I didn't mind even back then. Then some people call the world's most classic books a waste of time. Same thing.
And what are those crazy O'Brian books, Chris? Those are really wild. ha ha
I would say most people with a good bit of reading experience wouldn't be offended by someone using the word trash about even their favorite books. I read romantic suspense growing up that I know were called trash, and I didn't mind even back then. Then some people call the world's most classic books a waste of time. Same thing.
And what are those crazy O'Brian books, Chris? Those are really wild. ha ha


Yeah, I remember that too; and Mr. Knightley commenting that Emma was famous for compiling lists, but then not doing anything with them. As I recall, I don't think they actually showed what she had on her list though.



The scandalous novel Les Liaisons Dangereuses was published in English in the 1780s, and you see correlations between that and "Lady Susan". Austen also refers to reading "The Heroine" in her diaries.
Her novels mention Cowper, Scott, Pope, Shakespeare, Byron.
janetility.com

Yes, Emma's list would definetly be interesting! She was well educated, but in my mind, not as well read as she liked to think.
Anita wrote: "I've always wondered about novels printed chapter by chapter week by week in newspapers. What if you missed a week or two. Did people rush out to the news stand dying to find out what David Copperf..."
I took this quote from a Wiki article, but I have read this elsewhere, too. People did wait, impatiently, for the next installment!
The hype surrounding the conclusion of the series [The Old Curiosity Shoppe:] was unprecedented; Dickens fans were reported to storm the piers of New York City, shouting to arriving sailors (who may have read the last installment in the United Kingdom), "Is Little Nell alive?"
I took this quote from a Wiki article, but I have read this elsewhere, too. People did wait, impatiently, for the next installment!
The hype surrounding the conclusion of the series [The Old Curiosity Shoppe:] was unprecedented; Dickens fans were reported to storm the piers of New York City, shouting to arriving sailors (who may have read the last installment in the United Kingdom), "Is Little Nell alive?"

Thanks that was one of the best and concise explanations I've read so far.

Elena, I LOVE the new Emma. :) <3 But I do remember her making the book list...but they don't tell what they are. :(


I always thought the list were like New Year's resolutions - Emma has great intent and then her real life gets in the way.

How true . . . my favorite motto of myself is "I have great intentions, but horrible follow-through" Something I've been trying to work on for a couple of years
I think we all do that Sabrina! ;-)
I just joined and I have a question that has been lurking around in my mind for some time. In the Regency Era what did people read? I know in the Sense and Sensibility movie (with Emma Thompson) Marianne reads poetry, but did they read novels? If so, could someone name some novels they might have read. When I see an Austen character in a film picking up a book to read, I wonder what it is. :) Also, is it true that books were expensive and that's why, say, The Dashwoods had such small books (in the movie)? Thanks!