This volume shows how new spaces for engaging with Jane Austen have emerged and evolved since the bicentenaries. These spaces are much more interlocking and related than is usually acknowledged by scholarly publications: the collection itself is therefore a physical space in which essays written by academics, and readers and writers from other realms, have been deliberately put together and brought into conversation. The actual collecting of the essays has been consciously undertaken to refuse the binaries of popular and “high” culture, or of “criticism” and fandom, within Austen discourse, and to show that, while we might talk about Austen in different ways, these are ultimately strands of thinking and producing that feed into and influenc...