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Book ChapterDOI

Jane Austen and Fiction, 1787–1809

Anthony Mandal
- pp 41-74
TLDR
The authors examined three stages in Austen's early literary career, each demarcating her development from satirist of existing literary models to an innovating author fundamentally engaged with the contemporary fictional landscape.
Abstract
Although the aim of my study is to contextualize Austen’s later novels in terms of the fiction of the 1810s, it is nevertheless important to examine her earlier relationship with the antecedent novel market. Such an analysis is crucial to our understanding of both the mature novels and the continuous development of her oeuvre. This chapter will consequently examine three stages in Austen’s early literary career, each demarcating her development from satirist of existing literary models to an innovating author fundamentally engaged with the contemporary fictional landscape. The first section will briefly detail Austen’s early role as an interpreter of contemporary fictions, notably through her juvenilia, while the second and third sections will discuss her unsuccessful attempts to publish in 1797 and 1803.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Frances Burney's Camilla : "to print my Grand Work...by subscription"

TL;DR: Burney was also a skillful negotiator who understood the economic and aesthetic value of her literary productions, and worked hard to obtain what she felt to be appropriate remuneration for them.