SPECIAL INTEREST EVENT THURSDAY 16 APRIL – SUNDAY 19 APRIL 2015 Christ Church OXFORD Jane Austen’s PLACES INSPIRATION AND IMAGINATION xford Perspectiv O e An With permission of the Jane Austen Memorial Trust Rare Old Prints © The British Library Board www.ekduncan.com Jane Austen’s PLACES INSPIRATION AND IMAGINATION xford Perspectiv e An O eB ri dg em a n A rt Library/Get ty Im ag e s’ Special Interest weekend looks at significant places in the life and fiction of Jane Austen; from her beloved Hampshire and the country houses where she danced, flirted, wrote letters and – above all – observed, to the cities of Bath, London and Oxford. Tom Tower, Christ Church, Oxford With permission of the Jane Austen Memorial Trust Though Austen’s descriptions are spare, her novels convey a strong sense of the places which are so important to her characters. Many are set in the Home Counties and based on places she visited, and when she didn’t know a place she asked for details from the Austens’ wide network of connections. This Bill Nadel ‘T h W hy are Jane Austen’s novels still in print, still debated and more popular than ever after 200 years? Sir Walter Scott, the premier and bestselling novelist of Austen’s time, recognised that she had ‘a talent for describing the involvements and feelings and characters of ordinary life, which is to me the most wonderful I ever met with’. Scott acknowledged that she had a gift he lacked: ‘exquisite touch, which renders ordinary commonplace things and characters interesting, from the truth of the description and the sentiment’. 180 years later, Austen’s skill is universally acknowledged and her novels celebrated across the world. Institutions such as the Jane Austen Society of North America (JASNA) and Jane Austen Society of Australia (JASA) offer a lively forum for discussion. Jane Austen’s House, Chawton, Hampshire Rare Old Prints The Royal Crescent, Bath www.victoriaweb.org A View of Chatsworth House, Pemberley Brasenose College, Oxford In the spring of 1783 Jane Austen, then seven years old, came to Oxford with her sister Cassandra, and their cousin Jane Cooper, to be taught by their relative Mrs Cawley, wife of the late Master of Brasenose. The family already had Oxford connections – Mrs Austen’s uncle, Theophilus Leigh, was Master of Balliol from 1726-85, and Jane Austen’s father, the Reverend George Austen, went up to St John’s in 1747. Jane’s brothers, James and Henry, followed in their father’s footsteps, matriculating at the college in 1779 and 1788 respectively. While at St John’s, James, then a Fellow, and Henry, a scholar, started The Loiterer, an Oxford-based weekly periodical to which their sister may have contributed an arch, tonguein-cheek letter, under the pseudonym, Sophia Sentiment. Oxford continues to have many associations with Jane Austen and her family history. It is the ideal place in which to read and learn about the author and her work. The Bodleian Library holds first editions of Jane Austen’s published works and an unrivalled collection of her manuscripts, a selection of which you will be able to see during your stay at Christ Church. Oxford hosts the Jane Austen Fiction Manuscripts Digital Edition and The Clarendon Press of Oxford University Press published the first scholarly edition of Austen’s works. Members of the University’s academic community such as Professors Fiona Stafford and Kathryn Sutherland continue the scholarly work of establishing authoritative editions, reception and book histories, and illuminating criticism. They will join a number of experts in guiding you through the network of Jane Austen’s connections, people, places and fiction. Thursday 16th April Friday 17th April Saturday 18th April Sunday 19th April 2.00 - 4.00PM Registration 8.00AM Breakfast in Hall 8.00AM Breakfast in Hall 8.30AM Breakfast in Hall 4.15PM ‘How I wish I lived in a Jane Austen novel!’ Dodie Smith, I Capture the Castle Programme Welcome Pauline Linieres-Hartley, Steward of Christ Church 9.15AM ‘Our Chawton Home how much we find Already in it to our mind’. Letter to Frank Austen The Austens’ Knight in Shining Armour Richard Knight 9.00AM ‘What do we care about the way Oxford men spend their time and money?’ ‘Sophia Sentiment’ (alias Jane Austen) Austen and her Oxford Men Professor Fiona Stafford 9.30AM ‘I cannot speak well enough to be unintelligible.’ Northanger Abbey Jane Austen’s Language Dr Sandie Byrne 4.30PM ‘Many were the tears shed by them in their last adieus to a place so much beloved. “Dear, dear Norland!” said Marianne...’ Sense and Sensibility Place and Displacement in Jane Austen’s Life and Literature Dr Sandie Byrne 10.15AM Morning Coffee in Blue Boar Exhibition Space 10.15AM – 1.00PM Visits to Brasenose and 10.45AM ‘The rooms were lofty and 1.00PM Lunch in Hall Evensong at the Cathedral handsome, and their furniture suitable to the fortune of their proprietor.’ Pride and Prejudice From Neo-Classical Mansions to Gothic Abbeys: Austen’s Characters and their Country Houses Stephen Lawrence 7.00PM Welcome Drinks Reception 12.15PM Lunch in Hall 6.00PM A chance to attend in the Upper Library Buttery Bar open after Dinner 2.00PM ‘So very agreeable a place.’ Northanger Abbey Austen’s love-hate relationship with Bath Maggie Lane Andrew Ingamells 3.30PM High Tea on the Friend Room Terrace 4.30PM “I begin already to find my Morals corrupted” Jane Austen to Cassandra Austen, 23 August 1796 Pleasure and Vice in Austen’s London Dr Freya Johnston 6.00PM Evensong in the Cathedral 6.30PM Buttery Bar Open before and after Dinner Radcliffe Camera, Oxford 7.00PM Dinner in Hall 2.15PM – 4.15PM Jane Austen’s Work: what the manuscripts tell us Professor Kathryn Sutherland Bodleian Library 4.30 – 5.30PM Tea and Coffee available in Hall 11.15AM Lizzie Bennet and Marianne Dashwood in Geneva: Austen’s Endings and Afterlives Dr Gillian Dow 12.45PM Lunch in Hall 2.00PM Depart 6.00PM Evensong in the Cathedral or Film about Jane Austen Blue Boar Lecture Theatre 7.00PM Drinks Reception in Tom Quad (if fine) or Ante Hall The Pierpont Morgan Library, New York 7.30PM Dinner in Hall St John’s Colleges with Refreshments 10.45AM Refreshments in Blue Boar Exhibition Space 7.30PM Regency Dinner in Hall Buttery Bar open after Dinner Please note the Christ Church Picture Gallery is open to delegates at no charge between 10.30am – 1.00pm and 2.00pm – 4.30pm from Thursday to Saturday and between 2.00pm – 4.30pm on Sunday. Delegates may also like to visit the Upper Library and Exhibition on Thursday and Friday between 9.00am – 5.30pm, and on Sunday between 9.00am – 2.30pm. Isabel Bishop, A scene from Pride and Prejudice Speakers Dr Gillian Dow is Senior Lecturer at the University of Southampton and Director of Research, Chawton House Library. She is particularly interested in early translations of the work of Jane Austen and in Austen’s own reading. She is the author of many works on eighteenth-century literature, and Austen’s French and English contemporaries. These include (with Clare Hanson), Uses of Austen: Jane’s Afterlives http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/203795/, and entries on http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/338131/ ‘Translations’ in The Cambridge Companion to Pride and Prejudice (2013) and The Cambridge Companion to Emma (2015). Dr Freya Johnston is University Lecturer and Tutorial Fellow in English at St Anne’s College, Oxford. She is the author and editor of a number of books and articles, including Samuel Johnson and the Art of Sinking, 1709-1791 (2005), Samuel Johnson: The Arc of the Pendulum (2012), ‘Jane Austen’s Past Lives’ (2010) and ‘Johnson and Austen’, in Samuel Johnson After 300 Years (2012). At the moment she is editing Thomas Love Peacock’s novel, Crotchet Castle (first published in 1831). Regis, Jane Austen’s England, Jane Austen’s Family and Jane Austen and Food. Since 2013 Maggie has been Editor of the journal of the Jane Austen Society. Stephen Lawrence is the Chief Executive of Chawton House Library which is situated in the Hampshire manor house owned by Edward Austen Knight. Chawton House Library is a centre for the study of women’s writing from 1600-1830. It houses an exceptional collection of rare and unique first and early editions of women’s writing, including, of course, that of Jane Austen. Professor Fiona Stafford is Professor of English Language and Literature and Tutorial Fellow at Somerville College, Oxford. She is a specialist in eighteenth and nineteenth-century prose and poetry. Her publications include Brief Lives: Jane Austen and Jane Austen’s Emma: A Casebook of Criticism. She is the editor of a number of editions of Austen’s novels, including Pride and Prejudice and Emma. Maggie Lane’s most recent books are Understanding Austen: Key Concepts in the Six Novels (2012) and Growing Older with Jane Austen (2014). Her book A Charming Place: Bath in the Life and Novels of Jane Austen remains the definitive account of the influence of the city on the novelist. Other titles include Jane Austen and Lyme Dr Sandie Byrne is University Lecturer in English and Fellow of Kellogg College, Oxford. Her specialisms are in eighteenth to nineteenth-century fiction and twentieth-century poetry and her publications include Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park and Jane Austen’s Possessions and Dispossessions: The Significance of Objects. Christ Church, established by Henry VIII in 1546 is a unique foundation of college and cathedral. It is home to some 650 undergraduate and postgraduate students and over a hundred Senior Members. Christ Church occupies a 150acre site in the heart of the city, including the Meadow, a tranquil area of pasture, preserved for centuries and bounded by the Rivers Isis and Cherwell. Accommodation is in buildings of architectural and historical interest which reflect the different centuries since the college’s foundation. Rooms are single or twin occupancy and are located on the ground, first, second and third floors. Many rooms are en suite, and all have tea and coffee making facilities, telephone, free wi-fi internet and a refrigerator. A free laundry room is also provided. Meals are prepared under the direction of the college’s Executive Head Chef Chris Simms and are served in the magnificent Tudor Hall. A limited number of dietary requirements may be catered for provided they are requested at the time of booking. A full list of these diets is shown on our website. We apologise that we are unable to cater for any other dietary preferences but trust that one of the options available will be suitable. The Buttery Bar, adjacent to Hall, will be open before meals and after dinner. House wines, included in the price, are served at dinner. Christ Church, Oxford © The British Library Board Richard Knight is the owner of Chawton House, the ‘Great House’ which features in Jane Austen’s letters and which was inherited by her brother Edward from the Knight family. Part of that inheritance was the cottage which Edward Austen Knight provided for his mother and sisters, in which Jane Austen wrote her mature works. Mr Knight is a direct descendant of Edward Austen Knight. Professor Kathryn Sutherland is Professor of Bibliography and Textual Criticism at Oxford and Professorial Fellow in English at St Anne’s College. She is the author of numerous works, including Jane Austen’s Textual Lives: From Aeschylus to Bollywood, and the editor of Mansfield Park and A Memoir of Jane Austen and Other Family Recollections. She is also editor of the Jane Austen Fiction Manuscripts Digital Edition, a free-access online edition which launched in 2010 www.janeausten.ac.uk. She is currently writing a book on literary manuscripts. The Christ Church Experience How to book The programme fee is £565 per person and the en suite supplement is £45 per room. This includes the full lecture programme, three night’s accommodation in Christ Church, all meals, wines and refreshments as programmed and a staff service charge. Gratuities are not expected. Bookings may be made online or by phone for those without internet access. Full payment must be made at the time of booking. Online booking is available on the ‘Conferences & Events’ section of our website: www.chch.ox.ac.uk A 50% refund will be offered in the event of cancellations made up to and including 30 November 2014. No refunds will be offered in the event of cancellations on or after 1 December 2014. All monies are held by Christ Church. Special requirements Facilities at Christ Church are conveniently located together. Some ground floor bedrooms are available and the college has some residential facilities for wheelchair users, as well as a lift to the Hall. The Blue Boar Lecture Theatre also has a sound amplification system with an induction loop for hearing aid users. Force majeure The College reserves the right to make alterations and substitutions to the programme. It will not be liable for any non-performance under this contract arising out of circumstances beyond its control. Please direct all enquiries to: Special Interest Weekend, The Steward’s Office Christ Church, Oxford, OX1 1DP Tel: +44 (0)1865 286848 and 276174 Fax: +44 (0)1865 286328 Email: specialinterest@chch.ox.ac.uk Web: chch.ox.ac.uk The Bridgeman Art Library The Pump Rooms, Bath
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