{"id":11891,"date":"2012-08-15T07:30:23","date_gmt":"2012-08-15T06:30:23","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=11891"},"modified":"2013-07-01T23:43:56","modified_gmt":"2013-07-01T22:43:56","slug":"get-off-pemberleys-lawn-jane-austen-and-p-d-james-part-i","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2012\/08\/15\/get-off-pemberleys-lawn-jane-austen-and-p-d-james-part-i\/","title":{"rendered":"Get Off Pemberley’s Lawn! : Jane Austen and P.D. James, Part I"},"content":{"rendered":"
Death Comes to Pemberley<\/em> by P.D. James<\/strong><\/p>\n Design by Faber, Illustration Neil
Gower<\/p><\/div>\n
It\u2019s difficult not to take this book<\/a> as
something of a betrayal. Not of principles or community, but of me
personally, and the fact that I\u2019ve always admired P.D. James as
someone who really understood Jane Austen. (By which I mean, agreed with
me. Naturally.) When I was an undergraduate I went to see P.D. James
speak about detective fiction, and she said one of the most brilliant
things I have ever heard anyone say about literature. She declared
calmly that Austen\u2019s
Emma<\/strong> was the most perfect detective novel in the English
language. It gave the reader all the information, she argued, in a
perfectly fair way and just let them come to exactly the wrong
conclusion for themselves. At the twist, you can look back and see
where you went wrong, and how obvious the answer was if you\u2019d
only thought it through. And then you can read the novel again,
enjoying your awareness of the double tracks the story moves along
\u2013 knowing about the other story half-submerged in the surface
narrative, and switching your attention between them when they come
into contact.<\/p>\n
I loved this statement so much because it showed a respect for
Austen as an artist, and a recognition that her works are
deliberately crafted and not simply cleverly observed portraits from
life or timeless insights into human nature. They\u2019re literary
artefacts with their own integrity and internal structures,
something which often gets missed by both detractors and
enthusiasts. The former castigate her for not including economics,
the Napoleonic Wars or shifting models of gender relations, because
no one ever stands up in an Austen novel and tells everyone how
worried they are about economics, the Napoleonic Wars or shifting
models of gender relations. This is treating her like a newspaper,
not a novelist, as if it was Austen\u2019s duty to set down the
events of the day in order of importance, and by not explicitly
tackling the aftermath of the 1789 revolution she has relegated
herself to the Lifestyle supplement. <\/p>\n
In order to see the economics and politics in the novels, you have
to first take them seriously as works of art whose stories and
shapes have some sort of weight, not naive diary columns to be
discarded if they don\u2019t trumpet their opinions on current
affairs. At which point you notice that the legal arrangements which
tie up Mr Bennett\u2019s estate in
Pride and Prejudice<\/strong> prevent his daughters from
inheriting it, meaning that their survival is dependent upon
marrying relatively soon, particularly as the eligible young
officers of the militia may be posted to another camp at any time.
The entire Lydia-Wickham subplot takes place at the intersection
between the legal instruments of primogeniture and the troop
movements of the Napoleonic Campaigns. But we can only see this if
we stop reading the novels as a transparent window onto the period
they were written in, and respect them as novels whose internal
structures give them meaning.<\/p>\n Design by Headlinel, Illustration
Roxanna Bikadoroff<\/p><\/div>\n
Exactly the same mistake is made in the opposite direction, I
think, by Austen enthusiasts and the outlets of the
Dating-Industrial-Complex.
The Jane Austen Dating School<\/strong>, Jane Austen\u2019s Guide to Romance: The Regency
Rules<\/strong><\/a>, 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
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
<\/a>
<\/a>
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