Jane Austen was a trained musician who regularly played and sang during much of her adult life, yet song has not figured prominently in understandings of her relation to literary tradition. Music was not only a polite entertainment, however, but provided Austen with a significant source of textual transmission and unique opportunities for critical engagement through performance. This study identifies three songs that Austen performed at Chawton after 1809, during the years she was drafting her late novels. They appear in music albums owned by the Austen family in the early 19th century, currently held in private collections that have until recently been unavailable to scholars. The songs set texts by Robert Burns, ‘Monk’ Lewis, and Claris d...
A selection of songs and piano pieces from Jane Austen's collection, with many premiere recordings, ...
This study examines how Jane Austen’s knowledge of theatricality and performance influenced her work...
Examining the cultural and literary tropes of reading in late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-centu...
Displays of musicianship in Jane Austen’s novels establish setting and augment the complexity of the...
In English music it is difficult to find any clearly defined period between Purcell and the beginni...
This collection consists of eighteen printed and manuscript music books owned by members of the Aust...
Refereed article.A survey of the significance of music and musicianship in five novels of Jane Auste...
The first part of this thesis will consider how a range of eighteenth-century novels represented the...
Many of the song lyrics in Jane Austen’s personal music books (some collected or transcribed by her,...
Jane Austen\u27s American fans have a vibrant history. This dissertation traces how fans have sustai...
Jane Austen played the piano every morning before the rest of the family got up - both for her own p...
This thesis explores relationships between music produced around 1800 for domestic consumption and t...
Originally presented as a paper at the Jane Austen Festival, Canberra under the title 'A Most Luxuri...
566 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1986.During the late eighteenth an...
Making use of new digital resources (such as the recently-digitised Godmersham Park Library catalogu...
A selection of songs and piano pieces from Jane Austen's collection, with many premiere recordings, ...
This study examines how Jane Austen’s knowledge of theatricality and performance influenced her work...
Examining the cultural and literary tropes of reading in late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-centu...
Displays of musicianship in Jane Austen’s novels establish setting and augment the complexity of the...
In English music it is difficult to find any clearly defined period between Purcell and the beginni...
This collection consists of eighteen printed and manuscript music books owned by members of the Aust...
Refereed article.A survey of the significance of music and musicianship in five novels of Jane Auste...
The first part of this thesis will consider how a range of eighteenth-century novels represented the...
Many of the song lyrics in Jane Austen’s personal music books (some collected or transcribed by her,...
Jane Austen\u27s American fans have a vibrant history. This dissertation traces how fans have sustai...
Jane Austen played the piano every morning before the rest of the family got up - both for her own p...
This thesis explores relationships between music produced around 1800 for domestic consumption and t...
Originally presented as a paper at the Jane Austen Festival, Canberra under the title 'A Most Luxuri...
566 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1986.During the late eighteenth an...
Making use of new digital resources (such as the recently-digitised Godmersham Park Library catalogu...
A selection of songs and piano pieces from Jane Austen's collection, with many premiere recordings, ...
This study examines how Jane Austen’s knowledge of theatricality and performance influenced her work...
Examining the cultural and literary tropes of reading in late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-centu...