Jane Austen’s writing style may not be original, says academic
October 23rd, 2010 - 1:29 pm ICT by ANILondon, Oct 23 (ANI): An academic has claimed that novelist Jane Austen’s elegant writing style may not be hers, but that of her editor.
Kathryn Sutherland, a professor in Oxford University, reached the conclusion while studying 1,100 original handwritten pages of Austen’s unpublished writings.
“The manuscripts feature blots, crossing outs and a powerful counter-grammatical way of writing. The polished punctuation and epigrammatic style we see in Emma and Persuasion is simply not there,” the BBC quoted Sutherland as saying.
Professor Sutherland of the Faculty of English Language and Literature claims her findings refute the notion of Austen as ‘a perfect stylist’ and states that someone else was ‘heavily involved’ in the editing process.
She believes that person to be William Gifford, an editor who worked for Austen’s publisher John Murray II.
Letters between Austen’s publisher and an editor who worked with him acknowledge the untidiness of her writing.
According to Professor Sutherland, they suggest it was the editor who then intervened to sharpen the prose of one of English Literature’s most popular writers.
She also maintained that studying her unpublished manuscripts gave her ‘a more intimate appreciation’ of the author’s talents.
“The manuscripts reveal Austen to be an experimental and innovative writer, constantly trying new things. They also show her to be even better at writing dialogue and conversation than the edited style of her published novels suggest,” the professor explained.
Jane Austen (1775-1817) completed six novels in her lifetime, two of which were published posthumously. (ANI)
- Jane Austen fans celebrating Colin Firth's triumph - Jan 30, 2011
- Fake Jane Austen's fight club trailer goes viral on the Internet - Jul 26, 2010
- Lost Charlotte Bronte story published for the first time - Feb 29, 2012
- India celebrates - and debates - relevance of Charles Dickens - Feb 06, 2012
- Special 'Gitanjali' to mark Tagore's 150th birth anniversary - Feb 04, 2012
- 'Essential Tagore' nominated best book of year - Nov 29, 2011
- Jane Austen's Emma incarnated in Bollywood - Oct 03, 2009
- Jane Austen's Emma incarnated in Bollywood - Oct 03, 2009
- 'Cinema, literature on a par, building new synergy' - Feb 26, 2012
- Anita Desai's new characters search for wholeness (IANS Book Review) - Sep 19, 2011
- 'From Prada to Nada': Good source, bad execution (IANS Movie Review) - Mar 19, 2011
- Use stuff you know as springboard for novel: David Davidar - Sep 29, 2011
- Taking poetry to India's young readers - with Kamala Das - Apr 03, 2012
- Eminent litterateur Meenakshi Mukherjee dead - Sep 16, 2009
- Women's writing power coming into own in Africa - Feb 14, 2011
Tags: bbc, blots, english literature, jane austen, john murray, kathryn sutherland, literature claims, novelist jane, oxford university, persuasion, professor sutherland, prose, publisher john, punctuation, stylist, unpublished manuscripts, unpublished writings, william gifford, writing dialogue, writing style