Jane Austen’s gothic novel was published shortly after her death, but it had been a long time in preparation. Liz Philosophos Cooper traces the history of this most unusual of Austen’s novels.
The years 1793 and 1794 found Austen putting aside her Juvenilia and completing Lady Susan. What followed was her early creative period, in which she wrote Elinor & Marianne (an early version of Sense & Sensibility), First Impressions and Susan, which was renamed Northanger Abbey when it was published posthumously. In later years Austen returned to Sense & Sensibility and First Impressions making major revisions and renaming the latter Pride & Prejudice. Few changes, however, are believed to have been made to Susan when Austen returned to it in 1816. It is thus the best example we have of Austen’s writing at the ages of 23 and 24.
According to Cassandra’s later memorandum, “North-hanger Abby was written about the years 98 & 99”. Austen visited Bath for the first time in November and December 1797, returning in May and June 1799, visits that provided timely research for the initial setting of Susan. Evidence of a further overlap between Austen’s life and the novel appears in a letter to Cassandra of October 24, 1798, in which she mentions that her father is reading a new novel, The Midnight Bell, by Francis Lathom. It becomes one of the “horrid” novels that Isabella Thorpe recommends to Catherine Morland.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der 89 - September/October 2017-Ausgabe von Jane Austen's Regency World.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der 89 - September/October 2017-Ausgabe von Jane Austen's Regency World.
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