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Jane Austen Bibliography, 2019

A FEW WORDS ON FORMAT: the Bibliography has five sections:

 

1. Austen Editions: original works, under Austen if no extensive annotation or editing is involved; otherwise, under the editor’s name

2. Austen Circle: original works/editions by and about Austen family members and friends

3. Austen Studies: biographical, critical, and interpretive works

4. Selected Dissertations: a select, rather than exhaustive, list of works specifically on Austen

5. Popular Culture: sequels, continuations, mash-ups, films, merchandise, etc.

Explanatory notes are at the end of the document.

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1. Austen Editions

  • Austen, Jane. Complete Jane Austen Collection. 6 vols. Leicester, UK: Sweet Cherry, 2019. Boxed paperback collection.
  • _____. Complete Novels of Jane Austen. Introd. Ken Mondschein. San Diego, CA: Canterbury Classics. 2019.
  • _____. Complete Novels of Jane Austen. Orinda, CA: Seawolf, 2019. Each volume includes an introduction and original illustrations.
  • _____. Greatest Works of Jane Austen. Delhi: Fingerprint, 2019. Paperback set of 5 books.
  • _____. Northanger Abbey. Kindle ed. Alicante, Sp.: Cervantes Digital, 2019.
  • _____. Pride and Prejudice. Introd. Christina Lupton. Oxford World’s Classics. Oxford: OUP, 2019.
  • _____. Sanditon. London: HarperCollins, 2019.
  • Hughes-Hallett, Penelope. The Illustrated Letters of Jane Austen. London: Batsford, 2019.
  • Mullan, John, ed. Sense and Sensibility. 3rd ed. Oxford World’s Classics. Oxford: OUP, 2019. New, updated edition with new introduction, notes, chronology, and bibliography.
  • Roach, Alexandra, narr. Sanditon. By Jane Austen and Kate Riordan. New York: Hachette, 2019. Unabridged audiobook.   
  • Sutherland, Kathryn, ed. Sanditon. Oxford World’s Classics. Oxford: OUP, 2019. Includes an introduction, notes, and bibliography.
  • Todd, Janet, ed. Jane Austen’s Sanditon. London: Fentum, 2019. Includes introductory essay, illustrations, notes, list of continuations, and suggestions for further reading.
  • Woodfine, Katherine, and Jane Austen. Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. London: Hodder Children's, 2019. Austen novel illustrated and retold.

break graphic2. Austen Circle

  • Amy, Helen. The Austen Girls: The Story of Jane and Cassandra Austen: The Closest of SistersStroud, UK: Amberley, 2019.
  • Coldicott, Diana. “Jane Austen and Andover.” JAS Report (2019): 60-63.
  • Day, Felicity. “A Princely Neighbour.” JARW 98 (2019): 18-24. The Prince of Wales’s occupation of Kempshott Park in Hampshire (three miles from Steventon)  and his interactions with the local gentry, including the Austen family and friends. 
  • Dunning, Ronald. “Sir Thomas More and Jane Austen.” JAS Report (2019): 90-92.
  • Flood, Alison. "Jane Austen? Family Say Note Establishes Disputed Portrait's Identity." The Guardian 23 Jan. 2019. Web.
  • _____. "Rare Jane Austen Letter to Sister to Be Sold at Auction." The Guardian 7 Oct. 2019. Web.
  • Hurst, Jane. “The Digweeds and Steventon.” JAS Report (2019): 32-43.  
  • Jones, Hazel. “Austen-Leighs, Wilders and Jane Austen’s Bracelet.” JAS Report (2019): 93-97.
  • Jones, John Avery.  “Death Duties on Jane Austen’s Estate.” JAS Report (2019): 44-55.
  • Kavanagh, Francesca. “‘Marianne Knight/Godmersham Park’: Inscription as Community Interface in the Books of Jane Austen’s Niece.” Australasian Journal of Victorian Studies 23.1 (2019): 14-27.
  • Kimber, Marian Wilson. “Miss Austen Plays Pleyel: An Additional Source for the Jane Austen Family Music Collection?” Fontes Artis Musicae 67.1 (2020): 1-17. 
  • Kindred, Sheila Johnson. “Presenting Fanny Palmer, Jane Austen’s Transatlantic Sister.” Sensibilities 58 (2019): 5-20.
  • Knight, Caroline Jane. Narr. Alison Larkin. Jane and Me: My Austen Heritage. Alison Larkin Presents, 2019. Unabridged audiobook.
  • Looser, Devoney. "Pride and Precariousness: The Travails of Austen's 'Fifth-Great Niece.'” Rev. of Jane and Me: My Austen Heritage. Times Literary Supplement 25 Jan. 2019: 8.
  • Mahony, Stephen. “What Became of Mrs. Powlett?” JAS Report (2019): 56-59. Explores Austen’s reference to “the sad story of Mrs. Powlett,” the scandal surrounding her affair with Lord Sackville.
  • O’Brien, Alden. “Is This Jane Austen’s Sampler? JAS Report (2019): 64-71.
  • Reynolds, Sophie. “Mary Pearson: A Life and a Portrait.” JAS Report (2019): 17-22. Biographical information about Mary Pearson, who was briefly engaged to Austen’s brother Henry.
  • Stove, Judith. “Jane’s Beloved Friend.” JARW 102 (2019): 31-32. Introduces a new biography of Anne Lefroy.
  • _____. Jane Austen’s Inspiration: Beloved Friend Anne Lefroy. Philadelphia: Pen & Sword, 2019.

break graphic3. Austen Studies 

  • Ailwood, Sarah. Jane Austen’s Men: Rewriting Masculinity in the Romantic Era. London: Routledge, 2019.
  • Ansdell, Louise. “What Next for Jane Austen . . . at Chawton House.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 460-62.
  • Bander, Elaine. “‘Books Universally Read and Admired’: Mrs. Smith in Northanger Abbey.Persuasions 41 (2019): 163-79
  • Barchas, Janine. The Lost Books of Jane Austen. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 2019. The role that cheap reprints played in Jane Austen’s literary celebrity. 
  • _____. “The Lost Copies of Northanger Abbey. Persuasions On-Line 40.1 (2019).
  • Barchas, Janine, and Devoney Looser. “Introduction: What’s Next for Jane Austen?” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 335-44.
  • Barchas, Janine, and Kristina Straub. “Curating Will & Jane.” Cano and García-Periago. 357-97.
  • Barnum, Deborah. “Jane Austen Bibliography, 2018.” Persuasions On-Line 40.1 (2019).
  • Bearman, Robert. “William Shakespeare and Jane Austen: Biographical Challenges.” Cano and García-Periago. 51-71.
  • Benedict, Barbara M. “Jewels, Bonds and the Body: Material Culture in Shakespeare and Austen.” Cano and García-Periago. 97-125.
  • Benis, Toby R. “Spatial Consciousness and Spiritual Practice in Austen’s Mansfield Park.” Studies in Romanticism 58 (2019): 333-55.
  • Bewell, Alan. “Austen and the Mobility of Women.” Romanticism 25 (2019): 58-68.
  • Biajoli, Maria Clara Pivato. “Horrid Tropics? British Fiction and Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey in Brazil.” Persuasions On-Line 40.1 (2019).
  • Bonzol, Judith.  “The Governess Trade: ‘The Sale—Not Quite of Human Flesh—but of Human Intellect.’” Sensibilities 59 (2019): 21-39.
  • Brodey, Inger S. B. “Tyrants, Lovers and Comedy in the Green Worlds of Mansfield Park and A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” Cano and García-Periago. 173-92.
  • Buck, Pamela. “Consuming China: Imperial Trade and Global Exchange in Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park.” LIT: Literature, Interpretation, Theory 30 (2019): 211-29.
  • Burns, Margie. Pride and Prejudice and Slavery in America.” Persuasions On-Line 40.1 (2019).
  • Butler, Cheryl. “Jane Austen, Netley Abbey, and Gothic Tourism.” Persuasions On-Line 40.1 (2019).
  • Cano, Marina. “Austen and Shakespeare: Improvised Drama.” Cano and García-Periago. 239-67.
  • Cano, Marina, and Rosa García-Periago, eds. Jane Austen and William Shakespeare: A Love Affair in Literary Performance. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019.
  • Chandio, Rashid, Tarique, Shadab Fatima, and Saira Soomro. “Pride and Prejudice and A Doll’s House: A Comparative Feminist Discourse.” Language in India 19.8 (2019): 293-304.
  • Chandler, Alice. “‘A Pair of Fine Eyes’: Jane Austen’s Treatment of Sex.” Studies in the Novel 51(2019): 36-50.
  • Chosid, Suzi. “Drawing Lessons for Young Ladies.” Sensibilities 59 (2019): 77-94.
  • Christiaan, Monique. “The Jane Austen Society of the Netherlands: Dancing and Reading Our Way Back to Austen.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 480-81.
  • Clark, David L. “Insult to Injury: Romantic Wartime and the Desecrated Corpse.” European Romantic Review 30 (2019): 275-85.
  • Clark, Sandra, and Mary Gaither Marshall. “Changes in Collecting Jane Austen: Four Decades as Collectors.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 466-68.
  • Clery, Emma. “Jane Austen at the School of Ann Radcliffe.” JAS Report (2019): 77-89.
  • Codr, Ariana Reilly. “After Ever After: The Marriage Plot’s Farewell to Its Reader.” New Literary History 50 (2019): 197-218.
  • Cohen, Paula Marantz. “Jane Austen Knows that Manners Make the Man.” Wall Street Journal 13 Sept. 2019.
  • Cooper, Liz Philosophos. “The Jane Austen Society of North America.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 482-85.
  • Cortés, Nuria Calvo. “Conservatism or the Influence of the Semantics of Motion Situation in the Choice of Perfect Auxiliaries in Jane Austen’s Letters and Novels.” Developments in English Historical Morpho-Syntax. Ed. Claudia Claridge and Birte Bös. Amsterdam: Benjamins, 2019. 175-98.
  • Cox, Brenda S. “Churches, Chapels, Abbeys, and Cathedrals in Northanger Abbey. Persuasions On-Line 40.1 (2019).
  • Craig, Sheryl. “Jane and the Master Spy.” Sensibilities 58 (2019) 45-59. Describes how the character of George Wickham in Pride and Prejudice was based on a real-life spy.
  • Curran, Stuart. “Women Readers, Women Writers.” The Cambridge Companion to British Romanticism. 2nd ed. Ed. Stuart Curran. Cambridge: CUP, 2010. 169-86.
  • Dashwood, Rita J. “Jane Austen Studies 201.” JAS Report (2019): 110-12.
  • Datta-Barua, Seebany, and Jonathan S. Masur. “Wealth and Warfare in the Novels of Jane Austen.” Power, Prose, and Purse: Law, Literature, and Economic Transformations. Ed. Allison LaCroix, Saul Levmore, and Martha C. Nussbaum. Oxford:  OUP, 2019. 151-68.
  • Davidson, Hilary. Dress in the Age of Jane Austen: Regency Fashion. New Haven: Yale UP, 2019.
  • Dawson, Paul. “Fictional Minds and Female Sexuality: The Consciousness Scene from Pamela to Lady Chatterley’s Lover.” ELH 86 (2019): 161-88.
  • Del Nevo, Matthew. “The Sanity of Truth: Christian Feminism in Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park.” Sensibilities 58 (2019): 32-44. 
  • Dini, Rachele. “‘At Home Too Everything is Falling Apart’: Waste, Domestic Disorder, and Gender in Alison Lurie’s Early Fiction.” Journal of American Studies 53 (2019): 122-45. Includes discussion of Lurie’s first novel, Love and Friendship.
  • Dinter, Sandra. “Re-Walking the Paths of Pride and Prejudice: Intersectional Perspectives on Pedestrian Mobility in Jo Baker’s Longbourn.” Anglia: Zeitschrift für Englische Philologie 137.1 (2019): 105-25.
  • Dodge, Rachel. Guest Essay. JARW 98 (2019): 2-5. Describes three prayers that Austen wrote and interprets passages from the novels in light of the prayers.
  • Donovan, Julie. “The Encroachment on Highbury: Ireland in Jane Austen’s Emma.” New Hibernia Review 23.4 (2019): 13–29.
  • Dooley, Gillian. “Austen’s French Music.” JARW 101 (2019): 46-51.
  • Dow, Gillian. “‘We Must Allow for Difference of Taste’: Jane Austen, 19th-Century Publishing and 19th-Century Readers.” JAS Report (2019): 113-25.
  • Duquette, Natasha. “Eleanor Tilney as Cultural Historian.” Persuasions 41 (2019): 105-18.
  • Duncan, Kathryn. “Theory of Mind and Mind Eating: The Popular Appeal of Jane Austen and Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.” Evolution and Popular Narrative. Ed. Dirk Vanderbeke and Brett Cooke. Leiden: Brill Rodopi, 2019. 228-44.
  • Ewing, Jennifer S. “As the Wheel Turns: Horse-Drawn Vehicles in Jane Austen’s Novels.” Persuasions On-Line 40.1 (2019).
  • Fanning, Christopher. “Austen and Richardson’s Clarissa: The Case of Persuasion.Persuasions 41 (2019): 247-55.
  • Farr, Jason S. Novel Bodies: Disability and Sexuality in Eighteenth-Century British Literature. Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell UP, 2019. Includes “Coda: Hypochondria and the Implausibility of Heterosexual Romance in Jane Austen’s Sanditon.”
  • Folsom, Marcia McClintock, and John Wiltshire. “The Implicit Dramas of Northanger Abbey.Persuasions 41 (2019): 24-37.
  • Ford, Susan Allen. “‘Real Solemn History’ and Cassandra Leigh Cooke’s Battleridge.” Persuasions 40 (2019): 75-91.
  • Foretek, Nick. “A Royal Purchase: The First Jane Austen Novel Sold. Notes & Queries 66.2 (2019): 272-73.
  • Foster, Stephen. “Johan Zoffany: ‘The Jane Austen of English Art’?” Sensibilities 59 (2019): 57-76.
  • Franta, Andrew. Systems Failure: The Uses of Disorder in English Literature. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 2019. Includes chapter “Jane Austen and the Morphology of the Marriage Plot.”
  • Friday, Penelope. “Regency Cross-Dressing.” JARW 101 (2019): 38-44. 
  • _____. “Small Swords and Sabres.” JARW 98 (2019): 24-30. Description of the probable dueling implements if Mr. Bennet and Mr. Wickham had actually met for that purpose. 
  • Fron, Janine. “Janeite Games and Game Culture.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 475-77.
  • Fullerton, Susannah. “The Jane Austen Society of Australia: A Focus on the Future.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 478-79.
  • Galperin, William. “The Counterfactual Austen.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 362-77.
  • García-Periago, Rosa. “Shakespeare, Austen and Propaganda in World War II.” Cano and García-Periago. 269-90.
  • Garofalo, Daniela. “Abandoned by Providence: Loss in Jane Austen’s Persuasion.” Lacan and Romanticism. Ed. Daniela Garofalo and David Sigler. Albany: SUNY P, 2019. 61-80.
  • Gaston, Lise. “Thinking in Time: Jane Austen’s Last Work and Family Legacy.” Nineteenth Century Studies 31 (2019): 1-14.
  • Gehrer, Julienne. “Serving a Main Course in Jane Austen Culinary Studies.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 469-71.
  • Grandison, Julia. “Jane Austen and the Almanac.” Review of English Studies 70.297 (2019): 911-29.
  • Greenfield, Sayre N., and Troost, Linda V. “Modernity and Antiquity in Northanger Abbey. Persuasions On-Line 40.1 (2019).
  • Guillan, Charles. “An Ideal Husband.” Sensibilities 59 (2019): 40-56.
  • Guyatt, Mary. “Jane Austen’s House Museum.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 457-59.
  • Hall, Lynda A. “Flipping the Jane Austen Classroom.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 416-33.
  • _____. “Is It ‘a Marriage of True Minds’? Balanced Reading in Northanger Abbey and Persuasion.” Cano and García-Periago. 129-49.
  • Hamill, Kate. “Playwright.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 449-50.
  • Hardy, Augusta. “‘The Difference between True and False Politeness’: Pride and Prejudice and a Sermon of Bishop Hurd.” Persuasions 41 (2019): 213-22.
  • Hardyment, Christina. Novel Houses: Twenty Famous Fictional Dwellings. Oxford: Bodleian Library, 2019. Includes chapter “The Bewildered House: Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park (1814).”
  • Harris, Jocelyn. “Marvelous Miss Morland.” Persuasions 41 (2019): 38-49.
  • Hatton, Nikolina. “A Tale of Two Pianos: Actants, Sociability, and Form in Jane Austen’s Emma.” Open Cultural Studies 3.1 (2019): 135-47.
  • Havard, John Owen. Disaffected Parties: Political Estrangement and the Making of English Literature, 1760-1830. Oxford: OUP, 2019. Includes chapter “Austen and the Cultural Logic of Late Toryism.”
  • Hemingway, Collins. Northanger Abbey: The Bridge to Austen’s Mature Works—and More.” Persuasions On-Line 40.1 (2019).
  • _____. “The ‘Spy Nozzy’ Affair.” JARW 98 (2019): 35-41. Examination of Henry Tilney’s remarks on spies and an incident involving William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
  • Hershinow, Stephanie Insley. Born Yesterday: Inexperience and the Early Realist Novel. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 2019. Includes “Emma’s Dystopia.”
  • Hopkins, Lisa. “Austen and Shakespeare, Detectives.” Cano and García-Periago. 313-34.
  • Hudson, Glenda A. “Forbidden Familial Relations: Echoes of Shakespeare’s King Henry VIII and Hamlet in Austen’s Mansfield Park and Sense and Sensibility.” Cano and García-Periago. 193-213.
  • Hussain, Azar. “Performances of Lovers’ Vows in Bath 1801-1806.” Notes & Queries (2019): 268-271.
  • _____. “The 1795 Dating of Elinor and Marianne. Notes & Queries 66 (2019): 227-29.
  • Ikeda, Yuko. “‘I Love an Open Temper’: ‘Openness’ and ‘Reserve’ in Jane Austen’s Emma. Kumamoto Studies in English Language and Literature 61-62 (2019): 87-105.
  • Jane Austen Society. News Letter: The Jane Austen Society 52, 53 (2019). Ed. Maggie Lane and Mary Hogg (52); ed. Mary Hogg and Marion Davies (53).
  • _____. Report for 2019 (2019). Ed. Hazel Jones and Mary Hogg. Essays are individually cited.
  • Jane Austen Society (Kent Branch). Austentations 19 (2019). Ed. Paul Morris.

  • Jane Austen Society (Midlands Branch). Transactions 30 (2019). Ed. Dawn Thomas.

  • Jane Austen Society (Northern Branch). Impressions 58-60 (2019). Ed. Marilyn Joice.

  • Jane Austen Society of Australia. JASA Chronicle (2019). Ed. Ruth Williamson.
  • _____. Sensibilities 58, 59 (2019). Ed. Joanna Penglase. Essays are individually cited.
  • Jane Austen Society of North America. JASNA News 35.1-3 (2019). Ed. Sheryl Craig (35.1); ed. Susan L. Wampler (35.2-3).
  • _____. Persuasions: The Jane Austen Journal 41 (2019). Ed. Susan Allen Ford. Essays are individually cited. Table of Contents on the Web.
  • _____. Persuasions: The Jane Austen Journal On-Line 40.1 (2019). Ed. Susan Allen Ford. Web. Essays are individually cited.
  • Jane Austen’s Regency World [JARW]. Ed. Tim Bullamore. Edinburgh: Lansdown, 2019. Issues 97-102. Austen-related articles are individually cited.
  • Jann, Rosemary. “Vision and Character: Physiognomics and the English Realist Novel.” Victorian Studies 61 (2019): 471-73.
  • Jelínková, Ema, and Sárka DvoRáková. “The Ambivalent Satirist in Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey.” Hradec Králové Journal of Anglophone Studies 6.2 (2019): 133-37.
  • Jones, Hazel. “Tensions at the Table: Dining-Room Dynamics in Abbeys and Castles.” Persuasions 41 (2019): 13-23.
  • Jones, Katie. “Discrediting Femininity through Patriarchal Control: Catherine Morland’s Identity.” LOGOS: A Journal of Undergraduate Research 12 (2019): 16-25.
  • Kelly, Gary. “Romantic Fiction.” The Cambridge Companion to British Romanticism. 2nd ed. Ed. Stuart Curran. Cambridge: CUP, 2010. 187-208.
  • Kenney, Theresa. “‘Don’t Know Much about History’: History and Histrionics, Moderation and Passion in Northanger Abbey.Persuasions 41 (2019): 92-104.
  • Kennedy, Victoria. “Haunted by the Lady Novelist: Metafictional Anxieties about Women’s Writing from Northanger Abbey to The Carrie Diaries.” Women 30 (2019): 186-205.
  • Kessel, John. “Mary, Jane, and Me.” Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts 30.1 (2019): 29-39. On adaptation and his own novel using characters from Frankenstein and Pride and Prejudice.
  • Ki, Magdalen. “Kin Altruism, Spite, and Forgiveness in Pride and Prejudice.” Philosophy and Literature 43 (2019): 210-28.
  • Kohm, Lynne Marie, and Kathleen E. Akers. Law and Economics in Jane Austen. Lanham, MD: Lexington, 2019.
  • Krueger, Misty. “Handles, Hashtags, and Austen Social Media.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 378-96.
  • Lane, Maggie. “The Jane Austen Society (United Kingdom).” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 491-93.
  • Le Faye, Deirdre. “Biography, Archives, and Research: Keep Hunting!” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 434-37.
  • _____. “Jane Austen: Her Biographies and Biographers—or, ‘Conversations Minutely Repeated.’” Sensibilities 58 (2019): 10-31.  
  • Lee, Dwight R., and Cecil Bohanon. “Economics and Novels: Good, Evil and Becoming Better People.” Journal of Cultural Economics 43.4 (2019): 527-44. Self interest in terms of Adam Smith’s theory of moral sentiments and Austen’s novels.
  • Lee, Wendy Anne. Failures of Feeling: Insensibility and the Novel. Palo Alto: Stanford UP, 2019. Austen is discussed in chapter “Sense, Sensibility, Sympathy.”
  • Lee, Yoon Sun. “Austen’s Swarms and Plots.” European Romantic Review 30 (2019): 307-14.
  • Levy, Michelle, and Kandice Sharren. “Teaching Editions of the Works of Jane Austen: A Survey.” Texas Studies in Literature & Language 61 (2019): 443-48.
  • Li, Yuying, and Yuming Zhang. “A Comparative Study of Novel Translation from the Perspective of Feminist Translation Theory: A Case Study of the Two Chinese Versions of Persuasion.” Theory and Practice in Language Studies 9 (2019): 785-89.
  • Looser, Devoney. “The ABCs of Northanger Abbey: Advertisements, Backstories, and Classifications.” Persuasions On-Line 40.1 (2019).
  • _____. “Admiration and Disapprobation: Jane Austen’s Emma (1816) and Jane West’s Ringrove (1827).” Essays in Romanticism 26 (2019): 41-54.
  • _____. “Fan Fiction or Fan Fact? An Unknown Pen Portrait of Jane Austen.” Times Literary Supplement 13 Dec. 2019. Fan fiction about Jane Austen from The Lady’s Magazine, perhaps by Mary Russell Mitford. 
  • _____. Guest Essay. JARW 102 (2019): 2-6. Discusses how popular culture turned Pride and Prejudice into a Christmas story.
  • _____. “Jane Austen Camp.” Abo: Interactive Journal for Women in the Arts, 1640-1830 9.1 (2019): article 5. Web. https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/abo/vol9/iss1/5
  • _____. The Making of Jane Austen, with a New Afterword and Reader’s Guide. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 2019. Paperback.
  • Lopez, Isis Herrero. “Assessing Periodization in Histories of Literary Translation.” The International Journal of Translation and Interpreting Research 11.2 (2019): 46-57. Web. Discusses the history of translation of Jane Austen in Spain.
  • Luetkenhaus, Holly, and Zoe Weinstein. Austentatious: The Evolving World of Jane Austen Fans. Iowa City: UIP, 2019.
  • Lynch, Deidre Shauna. “Jane Austen and the Sex-Positive Novel.” Studies in the Novel 51 (2019): 33-35.
  • Malcolm Gabrielle. There’s Something about Darcy. London: Endeavour Quill, 2019. Reception history.
  • Mathes, Carmen Faye. “Reading and the Sociality of Disappointing Affects in Jane Austen.” Affect Theory and Literary Critical Practice. Ed. Stephen Ahern. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019. 85-103.
  • Matthew, Patricia A. “Jane Austen and the Abolitionist Turn.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 345-61.
  • McClay, David, ed. Dear Mr. Murray: Letters to a Gentleman Publisher. London: Murray, 2019.  Correspondence from the publisher of Emma, Northanger Abbey, and Persuasion.
  • McEachern, Claire. “‘As Sure as I Have a Thought or a Soul’: The Protestant Heroine in Shakespeare and Austen.” Cano and García-Periago. 151-71.
  • McGraw, Lindsay. “Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice (1813).” Writing Women of the Long 18th Century: A Guide to Selected Holdings in the Z. Smith Reynolds Library Special Collections & Archives. Ed. Claudia Thomas Kairoff and Megan Mulder. Winston-Salem, NC: Library Partner’s Press, 2019. 122-28. Collection of Wake Forest University.
  • McMaster, Juliet. “Catherine of Washington Square: Henry James and Northanger Abbey.” Persuasions 41 (2019): 200-10.
  • Menchaca-Bagnulo, Ashleen. “Marriage, Courtship and Aristotle’s Spouidaia in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice.” Perspectives on Political Science 49.3 (2019): 1-14.
  • Moore, Roger E. “Northanger before the Tilneys: Austen’s Abbey and the Religious Past.” Persuasions 41 (2019): 119-37.
  • Morrison, Robert. The Regency Years: During which Jane Austen Writes, Napoleon Fights, Byron Makes Love, and Britain Becomes Modern.  New York: Norton, 2019.
  • Muir, Rory. Gentlemen of Uncertain Fortune: How Younger Sons Made Their Way in Jane Austen’s England. New Haven: Yale UP, 2019.
  • Nagle, Christopher. “Austen’s Present Future Stagings.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 472-74.
  • Nakagawa, Tomoko. “Roses, Hyacinths, and Pineapples: Historical and Ecocritical Concerns in Northanger Abbey and The Mysteries of Udolpho.” Persuasions 41 (2019): 138-49.
  • Natali, Christopher J. “Was Northanger Abbey’s General Tilney Worth His Weight in Pineapples?” Persuasions On-Line 40.1 (2019).
  • Neckar, Lance M., and Sarah Witney. “Stowe Actually.” Literary Tourism and the British Isles: History, Imagination, and the Politics of Place. Ed. LuAnn McCracken Fletcher. Lanham, MD: Lexington, 2019. 137-63.
  • Normandin, Shawn. “Symbol, Allegory, and Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park.” Studies in Philology 116 (2019): 589-616.
  • _____. “Seeing the Sea in Jane Austen’s Emma and Ann Radcliffe’s Romance of the Forest.” Explicator 77.3-4 (2019): 91-94.
  • O’Brien, Alden. “American Gothic: Evidence of the Gothic and the Age of Sensibility in Federal America.” Persuasions On-Line 40.1 (2019).
  • Omirova, Dana. “Matches and Matrimony: Choice and Empowerment in Austen Video Game Adaptation.” Persuasions On-Line 40.1 (2019).
  • Oliver, Erica. “A Hierarchy of Feminine Readers: Educating the Quixote and ‘Writing’ the Authentic Woman.” Persuasions On-Line 40.1 (2019).
  • Opreaneu, Lucia. “Intertextual Ever Afters: Fictionalised Biography and Compensatory Adaptation in Shakespeare in Love and Becoming Jane.” Cultural Intertexts 9 (2019): 143–56.
  • Oswald, Ros. “Austen’s Favorite Music.” JARW 102 (2019): 46-50.
  • Page, Judith W. Shylock’s Turquoise Ring: Jane Austen, Mansfield Park and the ‘Exquisite Acting’ of Edmund Kean.” Cano and García-Periago. 217-38.
  • Parker, Deven M. “Epistolary Form in the Age of the Post Office.” Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900 59 (2019): 625-45.
  • Parker, Fred. On Declaring Love: Eighteenth-Century Literature and Jane Austen. New York: Routledge, 2019.
  • Peacocke, Emma. “The British Museum and Fanny Price’s East Room.” Studies in English Literature 59 (2019): 719-39.
  • Puschmann-Nalenz, Barbara. “The Interactive Reader, or: The Writeable in Narrative Texts.” Journal of English Language and Literature/ Yǒngǒ Yǒngmunhak 65.1 (2019): 19-48.
  • Pyrhönen, Heta. “The Twilight Saga as an Adaptation of Shakespeare and Austen.” Cano and García-Periago. 335-55.
  • Quint, Karin. Jane Austen’s England: A Travel Guide. Trans. Karen Holt. New York: ACC Art Books, 2019. Originally in Dutch.
  • Ramicelli, Maria Eulália. “Stages of Modernity in Perspective: Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice and José de Alencar’s Senhora.” Acta Scientiarum: Language & Culture 41.2 (2019): 1–11.
  • Reynolds, Sophie. “Jane Austen’s House at 70: 1949-2019.” JAS Report (2019): 98-103.
  • Rivero, Albert J. “Jane Austen and the Sentimental Novel.” The Sentimental Novel in the Eighteenth Century. Ed. Albert J. Rivero. Cambridge: CUP, 2019. 208-23.
  • Rogers, H. L. “Philosophy in Austen’s Pump Room: How Enlightened Tolerance Became Disgust.” Eighteenth-Century Fiction 32 (2019): 317–40.
  • Roome, Diana Reynolds. “The Gothic Mystery of Francis Lathom’s Life.” Persuasions 41 (2019):180-99.
  • Runge, Laura L. “Austen and Computation 2.0.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 397-415.
  • Rytting, Jenny Rebecca. “‘Pretty Fairly Divided between the Sexes’: Jane Austen on Gender.” Persuasions 41 (2019): 50-61.
  • Sabor, Peter. “‘In Remembrance of the Library’: The Dispersal and Retrieval of the Books at Godmersham Park.” JAS Report (2019): 23-31. Relates the history of the library at the estate of Austen’s brother Edward.
  • _____. “Reading with Austen.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 441-42.
  • Sadaka, George. “A Gothic Unconscious: Salisbury Cathedral as Metaphor and Symptom in Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey.” English Studies 100 (2019): 407–21.
  • Schuessler, Jennifer. “On the Austen Beat.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 455-56.
  • Shabäni, Maryam, Hossein Aliakbari Harehdasht, and Fahimeh Naseri. “A Comparative Study of Plato’s and Jane Austen’s Concept of Love in Pride and Prejudice.” International Journal of Applied Linguistics & English 8.3 (2019): 37-45.
  • Shears, Jonathon. “‘Old Men—and Women—May Be Permitted to Speak Long’: Samuel Taylor Coleridge and the Voice of Experience.” Romanticism 25 (2019): 249-60. Includes extended discussion of Miss Bates.
  • Shmidt, Jane. “‘Had I Died, It Would Have Been Self-Destruction’: Indulged Sensibility and Retaliatory Illness in Austen’s Sense and Sensibility.” English Studies 100 (2019): 422-37.
  • Shorr, Victoria. Midnight: Three Women at the Hour of Reckoning. New York: Norton, 2019. Jane Austen’s decision not to marry Harris Bigg-Wither; also moments for Mary Shelley and Joan of Arc.
  • Skelly, Victoria C. “Darcy’s Picture Gallery.” JARW 102 (2019): 23-29.
  • Sodano, Joel P. “Semblances of Affect in the Early English Novel: Narrating Intensity.” Affect Theory and Literary Critical Practice: A Feel for the Text. Ed. Stephen Ahern. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019. 65-82. Discusses Emma.
  • Sørbo, Marie Nedregotten. “Austen and Shakespeare Translated.” Cano and García-Periago. 73-96.
  • Spampinato, Erin A. “Tom Became What He Ought to Be: Mansfield Park as Homosocial Bildungsroman.” Studies in the Novel 51 (2019): 481-98.
  • Spencer, Stephen. “In ‘a Neat Little Drawg-room’: No. 8 College Street, Winchester.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 463-65.
  • Spongberg, Mary. Women Writers and the Nation’s Past, 1790-1860: Empathetic Histories. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2019.
  • Starks, Lisa S. “Screening Will and Jane: Sexuality and the Gendered Author in Shakespeare and Austen Biopics.” Cano and García-Periago. 291-301.
  • Stillman, Whit. “Jane Austen: Whither or Whence?” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 451-54.
  • Stove, Judy.  “‘A Large Piece of Muslin’: Harriet Martineau, Jane Austen and the Hidden Manuscript. Sensibilities 58 (2019): 60-77.  
  • _____. “Mrs. Bennet’s Hermitage, Revisited.” Sensibilities 58 (2019): 5-9. Describes hermitages in the eighteenth century and Austen’s fictional treatment of them.
  • Stovel, Nora Foster. “‘A Country-Dance as an Emblem of Marriage’ in Northanger Abbey. Persuasions On-Line 40.1 (2019).
  • Sukhera, Laaleen. “The Jane Austen Society of Pakistan: On Synergy and Sisterhood.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 486-90.
  • Sundriyal, Ankita. “Admiration to Love, Love to Matrimony: A Russellian Reading of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice.” Journal of Comparative Literature and Aesthetics 42 (2019): 172-81.
  • Sutherland, Kathryn. “Inside Jane Austen’s Laboratory.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 61 (2019): 438-40.
  • _____. “More than Words: The Latest Addition to the Collection of Letters at Jane Austen’s House.” JAS Report (2019): 72-76.
  • Tavela, Sara. “‘The Absolute Necessity of Seeming Herself’: Anne Elliot’s Work in Persuasion.” Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies 15.1 (2019): n.pag.
  • Thompson, Peggy. “Austen in the Twilight Zone.” Eighteenth Century 60 (2019): 467-71.
  • Tuite, Clara. “When the Earth Moves.” Romantic Circles: Literature and Science in an Age of Catastrophe. Ed. Anne Collett and Olivia Murphy. Cham, Switz: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019. 113-40. Includes Persuasion.
  • Vachris, Michelle Albert, and Cecil E. Bohanon. Northanger Abbey’s Guide to Life: Austen Extends Adam Smith’s Moral Philosophy.” Persuasions On-Line 40.1 (2019).
  • Veisz, Elizabeth. Northanger Abbey, Gothic Parody, and the History of the Fictional Female Detective.” Persuasions On-Line 40.1 (2019).
  • Wainwright, Valerie. “The Valentine’s Card: Far from the Madding Crowd and the Act/Art of Moral Evaluation.” Philosophy & Literature 43 (2019): 139-54. Compares Mr. Knightley to Hardy’s Gabriel Oak.
  • Wheatley, Kim. “Jane Austen: Gothic Novelist?” Persuasions 41 (2019): 62-74.
  • Wheeler, David. “Spatial Privacy in Mansfield Park.” New Perspectives on the Eighteenth Century 16.1 (2019): 82-94.
  • Wilkes, Joanne.  “Jane Austen as ‘Prose Shakespeare’: Early Comparisons.” Cano and García-Periago. 29-50.
  • _____. “Jane Austen’s Textual Revisions in The Watsons: A Preliminary Study.”  Persuasions 41 (2019): 223-32.
  • Wilkes, Sue. “Rival Authors.” JARW 99 (2019): 41-46. Describes Austen’s reactions to other writers of the period, many of whom she satirized.
  • Woods, Livia Arndal. “Generations in, Generations of: Pregnancy in Jane Austen.” Women’s Writing 26 (2019): 132-48.
  • Wright, Carrie. “Epistolary Machinations in the Female Gothic: Northanger Abbey and the ‘Horrid’ Novels.” Persuasions On-Line 40.1 (2019).
  • Xin, Wendy Veronica. “The Importance of Being Frank.” Novel: A Forum on Fiction 52 (2019): 23-43. An analysis of Emma.
  • Yahav, Amit. “Leisure Reading and Austen’s Case for Differentiated Time.” Eighteenth Century 60 (2019): 163-83.
  • Yavuz, Mehmet Ertug. “Jane Austen’s Romantic World as Reflected in Her Novels.” Euromentor Journal 10.4 (2019): 122-27.
  • Zaman, Mira. “‘Save Us from Deceiving Ourselves’: What Jane Austen’s Prayers Reveal about Self-Deception in Emma.” Persuasions 41 (2019): 233-46.
  • Zhang, Yuchao. “From Sensibility to Sense—an Analysis on the Shift of Marianne’s Views on Marriage in Sense and Sensibility.” Theory and Practice in Language Studies 9.3 (2019): 347-52.
  • Zhuang, Jie. “The Transformative ‘Fall’: A Structural Metaphor in Jane Austen’s Persuasion. Persuasions On-Line 40.1 (2019).
  • Zohn, Kristen Miller. “‘Some Handsome Warrior’ and ‘Ladies in Blue Satin’: Portraiture in Gothic Novels and the Work of Jane Austen.” Persuasions 41 (2019): 150-62.

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4. Selected Dissertations

break graphic5. Popular Culture

  • Andrews, Sophie. Be More Jane: Bring Out Your Inner Austen to Meet Life's Challenges. [n.p.]: CICO, 2019.
  • Bea, Kay. Letters from the Heart: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. [Author], 2019.
  • Birchall, Diana. The Bride of Northanger: A Jane Austen Variation. [US]: White Soup, 2019.
  • Blake, Elizabeth. Pride, Prejudice & Poison: A Jane Austen Society Mystery. New York: Crooked Lane, 2019.
  • Breen, Bella. Darcy’s Cinderella: A Jane Austen Variation. [Author], 2019.
  • _____. Four Months to Marry: A Jane Austen Variation. [Author], 2019.
  • Brown, Leenie. Addie: To Wager on Her Future. [Author], 2019. Other Pens, Mansfield Park Book 5.
  • Capps, Christie. One Bride & Two Grooms: A Pride & Prejudice Novella. [Author], 2019.
  • Clarkston, Nicole. Nefarious: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. [US]: White Soup, 2019.
  • Cooper, Julie. The Perfect Gentleman: A Pride & Prejudice Variation. [Author], 2019.
  • Cox, Karen M. Undeceived: Pride & Prejudice in the Spy Game. [n.p.]: Adalia Street Press, 2019.
  • D’Orazio, Amy. A Lady's Reputation: A Pride & Prejudice Variation. [n.p.]: Quills & Quartos, 2019.
  • Everly, Riana. Through a Different Lens: A Pride & Prejudice Variation. Toronto: Bay Crest, 2019.
  • Fairbanks, Rose. Courtship at Rosings: A Pride and Prejudice Novella. [Author], 2019. Jane Austen Reimaginings.
  • Filippi, Rosina. Illus. Margaret Fletcher. Playing Jane Austen: Parlour Plays for Drawing-room Performance. 1895. Rpt. London: British Library, 2019. 
  • Firkin, Jacqueline. Hearts, Strings, and Other Breakable Things. Orlando, FL: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2019. A re-telling of Mansfield Park for young readers.
  • Galland, Richard. Pride & Prejudice & Puzzles: Ingenious Riddles & Vexing Dilemmas Inspired by Jane Austen's Novels. Watertown, MA: Charlesbridge, 2019.
  • Greeley, Molly. The Clergyman's Wife: A Pride and Prejudice Novel. New York: Morrow, 2019.
  • Harris, Jocelyn.  “Austen and Trump.” JARW 97 (2019): 12-14. Explores Austen’s satire of Britain’s leaders and how it might be expressed in a satire of Donald Trump.
  • Helm, Robin M. More to Love: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. [Author], 2019. My Beloved, My Friend book 1.
  • Ho, Rodney. “Lifetime Modernizes Pride and Prejudice with African-American Cast in Atlanta.” The Atlanta Journal-Constitution Radio & TV Talk Blog 1 June 2019. https://www.ajc.com/blog/radiotvtalk/lifetime-modernizes-pride-and-prejudice-with-african-american-cast-atlanta/tcBbsn1xPfMnmnXtpnrXSM/.
  • Howe, Phil. Twelve hours: Jane Austen's Twelve Hour Engagement: A Stage Play. Basingstoke, UK: Hidden Britain Tours P, 2019.
  • Huey, Bridgid. A Chance Encounter in Pemberley Woods: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. Oysterville, WA: Meryton, 2019.
  • Hughes, Kathryn. “Revolting Characters: A New Play that Takes Liberties with Jane Austen.” Times Literary Supplement 18 Oct. 2019. Rev. of The Watsons by Laura Wade at the Menier Chocolate Factory, London.
  • Jalaluddin, Uyma. Ayesha at Last. New York: Berkley/Penguin Random House, 2019. A modern-day Muslim Pride and Prejudice.
  • Jones, Wendy. “Siblings in Jane Austen’s Novels.” Pride & Possibilities 63 (24 Nov. 2019). Jane Austen Literary Foundation. Web.
  • Joy, Jennifer. Fitzwilliam Darcy, Poet: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. [Author], 2019. Dimensions of Darcy Book 2.
  • Kahler, K. C. A Case of Some Delicacy: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. [n.p.]: Quills & Quartos, 2019.
  • Kamal, Soniah. Unmarriageable: A Novel. New York: Ballantine, 2019. A retelling of Pride and Prejudice set in modern-day Pakistan.
  • Kincaid, Victoria. Darcy in Hollywood: A Modern Pride and Prejudice Variation. [Author], 2019.
  • _____. When Charlotte Became Romantic: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. [Author], 2019.
  • King, Violet. Mr. Darcy’s Cipher: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. [Author], 2019. Spies and Prejudice Book 1.
  • _____. Mr. Darcy’s Missing Bride: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. [Author], 2019. Power of Darcy’s Love Book 1.
  • Kloester, Jennifer. Jane Austen’s Ghost. Melbourne: Overlord, 2019.
  • Kozlowski, Bryan. The Jane Austen Diet: Austen's Secrets to Food, Health, and Incandescent Happiness. Nashville: Turner, 2019.
  • _____. The Jane Austen Diet: Austen’s Secrets to Food, Health, and Incandescent Happiness. Narr. Steve Marvel. Blackstone, 2019. Unabridged audiobook.
  • Lauder, Suzan. The Mist of Her Memory: A Pride and Prejudice Romantic Suspense Variation. Oysterville, WA: Meryton, 2019.
  • Lewis, Jessie. Speechless: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. [Author], 2019.
  • Looser, Devoney. The Daily Jane Austen: A Year of Quotes. Chicago: UCP, 2019.
  • Lutz, Iris. Guest Essay. JARW 101 (2019): 2-6. A history of the Jane Austen Society of North America on its fortieth anniversary. 
  • McCready, Georgette. “Sanditon on Screen.” JARW 101 (2019): 16-22.
  • Methold, Ken. In Search of Jane Austen: An Investigation of a Life. [Australia]: AIA, 2019. A cozy mystery.
  • Mullaney, Colleen, and Christopher Bain. Gin Austen: 50 Cocktails to Celebrate the Novels of Jane Austen. New York: Sterling Epicure, 2019.
  • Odom, C. P. Perilous Siege: Pride and Prejudice in an Alternate Universe. [Author], 2019.
  • Palmer, Fiona. Matters of the Heart. Sydney: Hachette Australia, 2019. A modern retelling of Pride and Prejudice set in Western Australia.
  • Perry, Philippa. “I Used to Love Jane Austen—Now I Think She Was a Snob.” New Statesman 8 Mar. 2019: 62.
  • Pride and Prejudice Atlanta. Screenplay Tracy McMillan. Dir. Rhonda Baraka. Perf. Tiffany Hines, Juan Antonio, Jackée Harry. Lifetime 1 June 2019. TV.
  • Rao, Mahesh. Polite Society. New York: Putnam, 2019. A modern retelling of Emma.
  • Reynolds, Abigail. A Matter of Honor: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. [US]: White Soup, 2019.
  • Reynolds, Sophie. Guest Essay. JARW 99 (2019): 2-8. A history of the establishment and restoration of Jane Austen’s House Museum on its seventieth anniversary.
  • Rockas, Leo, and Jane Austen. Catharine or the Bower. Mechanicsburg, PA: Brown Posey, 2019.
  • Sanders, Nancy I. Jane Austen for Kids: Her Life, Writings, and World: With 21 Activities. Chicago: UCP, 2019.
  • Sandiford, M. A. Darcy's Redemption: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. [Author], 2019.
  • Sanditon. Screenplay Andrew Davies. Dir. Olly Blackburn, Lisa Clarke, Charles Sturridge. Perf. Rose Williams, Theo James, Crystal Clarke. Red Planet Pictures, ITV, PBS, 2019.
  • Sheridan, Sara. The World of Sanditon. New York: Grand Central, 2019. The official companion to PBS/Masterpiece's drama.
  • Starnes, Joanna. The Journey Home to Pemberley: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. [Author], 2019.
  • Thompson, Linda C. A Turn in Their Dance: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. [Author], 2019.
  • Thornburgh, Blair. Ordinary Girls. New York: Harper Teen, 2019. A humorous contemporary take on Sense and Sensibility.
  • Trupp, Mirta Ines. The Meyersons of Meryton: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. [Author], 2019.
  • Webb, Brenda J. Taking Another Chance: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. [Author], 2019.
  • Williams, Marcia. Hooray for Women! Somerville, MA: Candlewick, 2019. A comic-strip-style book for children about famous women’s noteworthy achievements. Includes Jane Austen.

 

NOTES



1. Style: 
the bibliography follows the MLA 7th edition with this major exception: the medium qualifier is added only for non-print titles (i.e., Web, Film, CD, DVD, Ebook, etc.). Alphabetization follows the NISO rules rather than MLA: a blank space comes before a number or a letter in filing (e.g., Le Faye comes before Leal) rather than letter-by-letter order.

2. Cross-references are used for works in essay collections or anthologies to minimize repetition: the citation refers to the author/editor and page numbers only; the full citation appears under the author or editor.

3. Annotations are included only for those entries where title alone is not self-explanatory.

4. Reprint editions: the past few years have seen an inordinate number of reprints of older editions, critical works, and biographies, as well as an increased number of books available electronically. Editor Susan Allen Ford and the bibliography team agree that all cannot possibly be listed; we will only see an increase in such works as the reprint publishers, POD suppliers, and ebook companies continue their efforts to make such works available. We would just make note of this fact and encourage you to search online for older titles you might be looking for to see if they are available in these newer formats, and also alert you that what looks like a new work might actually be a reprint of an older work, and perhaps less expensive in its original edition.

5. Paperback reprints will be included in the annual bibliography only if published four or more years after the original edition.

6. US/UK publication: as a number of works are published in the US and the UK in different years, an effort will be made to include each publication in its publication year, with variations in titles noted.

7. Popular Culture: this category includes sequels, continuations, mash-ups, adaptations, films, merchandise, etc. This list is selective. Those titles having no place of publication or publisher noted are cited as “[Author], date.”

8. Kindle/ebooks: if a work is published only as an ebook, it will not be cited. Exceptions will be decided on a case-by-case basis.

9. Book reviews: a review of a work on Jane Austen is generally not cited unless it is a substantive essay in its own right.

Your comments, suggestions, additions, or corrections are encouraged and will be rewarded with a reply.

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