Resurgence in Jane Austen Interest Tied to Yearning for Romance
Becoming Jane is the Latest of Austen-inspired Hollywood Films
By Anne Chekal, published Aug 14, 2007
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So why the renewed interest now? In 1995, the BBC mini-series of Pride and Prejudice re-introduced an entire new audience to the beauty of Austen's works. The Hollywood movies Sense and Sensibility in 1995 and Emma in 1996 quickly followed. That beautiful actors like Colin Firth, Emma Thompson, Kate Winslet, Hugh Grant, and Gwyneth Paltrow spiced up the characters doesn't hurt either.
The latest film, Becoming Jane, starring up-and-coming It Girl Anne Hathaway, arrives in theaters on August 10. Becoming Jane depicts an imaginary romance between Jane Austen and a male acquaintance, and how it influenced Austen's work.
Jane Austen was the first important female English writer, and her reputation for excellent character depictions and strong females transcend the love story plots of each of her novels. For anyone seeking a convincing story about the female condition, manners, and the everyday life of the Romantic period, Austen is the premiere author. In addition to her most well known novels, Pride and Prejudice (1813) and Sense and Sensibility (1811), Austen wrote four other books: Northanger Abbey (1798), Mansfield Park(1814), Emma (1816), and Persuasion (1818, posthumously published).
Beyond the popularity of the films, and the perennial presence of Pride and Prejudice on high school English reading lists, Austen's themes of love and relationships make her books eternal reading material. In recent years a range of Austen-inspired books have flooded bookstores, well beyond the scope of Bridget Jones's Diary.
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