I'm sure 2013 will be filled with great Austen fun since it is the year of Pride and Prejudice bicentenary and there have been many great events announced already.
There are also several interesting books coming out, though not all of them related to Pride and Prejudice, but all of them Austen-related . Among the ones coming out soon, here is one I'm really curious about.
Paula Byrne, Jane Austen - A Life in Small Things
Paula Byrne announced she was writing a book about Jane Austen last year when she brought to our attention a mysterious portrait of a lady she declared to be of our beloved Jane. Many Austenites were and still are skeptical, but, maybe , Ms Byrne will win them over with her new achievement: an unusual biography of their favourite writer.
Book Blurb from publishers Harper Collins site
Who was the real Jane Austen? Overturning the traditional portrait of the author as conventional and genteel, bestseller Paula Byrne’s landmark biography reveals the real woman behind the books. In this new biography, best-selling author Paula Byrne (bestselling author of Perdita, Mad World) explores the forces that shaped the interior life of Britain’s most beloved novelist: her father’s religious faith, her mother’s aristocratic pedigree, her eldest brother’s adoption, her other brothers’ naval and military experiences, her relatives in the East and West Indies, her cousin who lived through the trauma of the French Revolution, the family’s
amateur theatricals, the female novelists she admired, her
Have you seen the small sketch of Jane Austen in the National Portrait Gallery in London among the huge paintings on the walls which is the only officially recognised existing image of her It is small, not at all grand, and made with love by an amatorial sketcher: Jane's beloved sister, Cassandra. That's not enough for such a great writer and the enormous popularity she has gained nowadays. But there's a new intriguing item in the gallery of possible images of Miss Austen we have collected so far. This might-be an Austen portrait has been analysed in detail in an original TV programme on BBC 2: Jane Austen The Unseen Portrait?
I'm totally caught in this mistery. This BBC show was so good and well built as a literary/art case to be scientifically investigated on, but in a detective-story-like manner, that it was incredibly gripping though simply a documentary programme. The thorough, passionate work of reasearch/investigation literary scholar Dr Paula Byrne has undertaken from May 2011 on , after getting this portrait of a "Miss Jane Austin" (mispelt, with an "i" instead of an "e", in a note on its back) as a gift from her husband, is remarkable and encomiable. Her enthusiasm is contagious.
Dr Paula Byrne's Portrait of a "Miss Jane Austin"
Why is this portrait so important if it comes out to be really of Jane Austen? Not only because it will get an immeasurable value on the market (it was only paid £ 2,000) , but especially because it will revolutionise the view the world has of one of Britain's greatest writers.
Dr Byrne and BBC Martha Kearney on their quest
As a matter of fact, if it comes out to be real, nothing would change for me, for what it counts. In fact, what first strucks me as a watcher is that THAT might well be the sharp-tongued, witty, intelligent, self-aware and very matter-of- fact Miss Austen I've always had in my mind: little sweetness, no romance, no cuteness. This could never be enough in a serious investigation, but the emotion the sight provoked in me at first was close to tears (I know, I know, I'm not Jane-Austen-like at all in that and in many other respects) and it happened before the account of Dr Byrne's investigation started, right at the first glimpse of the portrait on the screen. It might be HER!
At the end of her research Dr Byrne's proposes the case, supported by a number of evidences and clues, to illustrious Austen experts such as Deirdre Le Faye, Professor Kathryn Sutherland of Oxford University and Professor Claudia Johnson of Princeton. They are invited to listen to what Dr Paula Byrne has discovered about the portrait she owns and decide whether it may bear any resemblance to what Jane Austen might have been like. Dr Byrne faces them in great excitement and tries to convince them of the goodness of her own investigating work. Did she succeed in convincing them?
The answer only in the end. First, the main evidences and clues she presents to support her theory:
- forensic tests were carried out on the ink used (constant white) and the vellum which proved it can be dated something between 1811 and 1869 (before the publication of James Edward Austen-Leigh’s Memoir)
- the clothes the lady in the picture wears were recognised by an expert as consistent fashionable clothing in the years between 1813-1815
- the family resemblance , especially the nose, was studied with highly modern techniques used to identify criminals from CCTV footage or photos. The resemblance is stunning, but the computer study supports that mere impression
- the surname was often mispelt as "Austin" by people who knew Jane in her life: Eliza Chute (whom Dr Byrne is inclined to believe to be the amateur artist who drew this portrait in London), Elizabeth Lee, The Countess of Morley, Mrs Mosley and John Murray, her publisher, on a royalty check.
There are lots of doubts to be solved and questions to be answered yet, so this research must undoubtedly go on in order to be proved totally improbable or genuine. But what did the experts consulted by Dr Byrne say in the end? Where they convinced? Did they reject her theory?
Deirdre Le Faye, Prof. Kathryn Sutherland and Prof. Claudia Johnson
She succeeded in bringing to her side two out of three scholars and she considered that "much more than she could have expected". Deirdre Le Faye considers it "an imaginary portrait of Jane Austen" and during the presentation she debated most of Dr Byrne's clues. The other two experts, Professor Sutherland and Professor Johnson, were more supportive and , in the end, they agreed that it could possibly be an image of Jane Austen taken during her life by an amateur artist.
I'm sure we will hear more about Dr Byrne and her research on this portrait. Meanwhile, I'm totally fascinated by the lady in the picture.