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Jane Austen and Leisure (Hardcover)
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Jane Austen and Leisure (Hardcover)
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Jane Austen's novels portray a leisured society of gentlemen and
ladies who do not need to work. Even the men with professions, such
as sailors and soldiers, are almost never seen working; though
leisure was not meant to be an excuse for idleness. The proper uses
of leisure are to fulfill duties, to read and think, and to pursue
social relations in a world where family and marriage for the
propertied were of central importance. The activities pursued in
Jane Austen's novels, and the way they apply themselves to them,
are significant to the understanding of her characters and the
roles they play. The working of society depended on a round of
visits, dinners and evening parties. Bath and other spas were
active centres of entertainment of all kinds; and the seaside
resorts were growing in importance. Jane Austen experienced these
and put them to use in her novels; but she also registered the fact
that quiet, solitary pursuits such as reading, walking or needlwork
might be more to the taste of a Fanny Price or Anne Elliot. Male
characters enjoy their leisure in a number of sports, often
glimpsed off stage - John Thorpe drives his gig wildly through Bath
and Tom Bertram is nearly killed by a fall at Newmarket. This text
identifies leisure and its use as a central characteristic of
Austen's work.
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