The Jane Austen Guide to Living Happily Ever
After<\/strong><\/a> and all the rest seem to assume that
the value of these novels about courtship in the Regency
lies in how similar they might be to courtship in the
second Elizabethan era. The blurb of one suggests that
\u201cwe might have just lost touch with the fundamental
rules\u201d of dating, and offers \u201cthe only
relationship guide based on stories that really have stood
the test of time…full of concrete advice and wise
strategies that illustrate how honesty, self-awareness and
forthrightness do win the right man in the end and weed
out the losers, playboys and toxic flirts.\u201d For this
attitude, Austen was the Monet of prose fiction \u2013
only an eye, but my God, what an eye. The novels can offer
us nothing but a meticulous copy of reality, which we can
superimpose over our own lives and shuffle around the
pieces so they match. It lacks a sense that the works
might not be porous and amorphous, that we can\u2019t
simply dip in and haul up a ladle full of
\u201cAusten\u201d, but might have to investigate where
that particular ladleful came from and what relation it
bore to the bucketful around it. For the dating guides,
the stories lack individual integrity and shape, they can
just be copied and printed across any surface like a Cath
Kidston pattern.<\/p>\n
Both attitudes are obviously, as that
Tumblr<\/a> would say, PROBLEMATIC. The first tends to
deny that women writers writing about women\u2019s lives
can have any significance beyond their literal content.
It\u2019s the attitude that provides us with a
women\u2019s supplement in newspapers because everything
else in the paper is assumed to pertain to men. It
reinforces the supposed distinction between a private
female sphere, in which dating and clothes are the
ruling topics, and a male public sphere where politics
and economics takes place. The second underpins the
male\/female spheres in a slightly different way,
encouraging us to think that one of the great female
writers is mostly interesting because of what she can
tell us about Catching A Man. It takes Austen\u2019s
insights into the inequalities of social life and the
power imbalances between the genders, and calcifies
those inequalities as the fundamental \u201crules\u201d
of dating. More generally, the lack of concern for the
specific form of the works seem to risk playing into a
long-standing tradition in Western thinking to associate
men with \u201cform\u201d and women with
\u201ccontent\u201d. I may be over-reading that last
point, but the line from Plato to Augustine to critiques
of women\u2019s fiction as interchangeable
\u201cslush\u201d provides a definite context for
thinking about attitudes to Austen which assume her
writing is an undifferentiated and unstructured
mass.<\/p>\n
P.D. James seemed to be standing out against both these
approaches, insisting that books like
Emma<\/strong> or
Sense and Sensibility<\/strong> deserved respect as
consciously crafted artefacts, whose meanings
couldn\u2019t be reduced to their surface in either
direction. Along with that came a respect for the
distinction between \u201cJane Austen\u2019s
world\u201d and the books which Austen wrote \u2013
that the novels were neither a photographic copy of
Regency life, not were they series of episodes in a
world-building project which could be placed
end-to-end to produce a fictional universe across
which characters could wander. On the contrary, each
one had its own concerns and perspective. <\/p>\n
Or so I thought. When she wrote Death Comes To Pemberley<\/strong><\/a> it
seemed that James had displayed the same
attitude as the dating guides and the Austen
pastiche industry: that her novels could be
regarded as creating \u201cAustenworld\u201d,
which anyone could stroll in and out of at will.
Slightly ironically, it was her comments about
Emma<\/strong> as the most perfect detective
novel in the language which made me think that
writing an actual detective novel set in
Pemberley demonstrated a cavalier disdain for
the integrity and form of
Pride and Prejudice<\/strong>.<\/p>\n