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Jane Austen Bibliography, 2016

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. Emma. Afterword David Pinching. London: Macmillan Collector’s Library, 2016.
  • _____. Jane Austen: Seven Novels. New York: Barnes and Noble, 2016. Leatherbound Classics.
  • _____. Jane Austen Collection. London: Arcturus, 2016. Deluxe boxed gift set, includes all six novels. Also published separately.
  • _____. Jane Austen Collection. London: Macmillan Collector’s Library, 2016. A limited edition boxed set, a reissue with new afterwords; illustrations by Hugh Thomson. See individual titles. 
  • _____. Jane Austen: The Dover Reader. Mineola: Dover, 2016, c2015. Dover Thrift Editions. Includes: Love and Freindship; The History of England; The Beautifull Cassandra; Pride and Prejudice; Persuasion; and several of Austen’s letters. 
  • _____. Mansfield Park. Afterword Nigel Cliff. London: Macmillan Collector’s Library, 2016. 
  • _____. Mansfield Park. Trans. Helga Schulz. Munich: Deutscher Taschenbuch-Verlag, 2016. German text. 
  • _____. Northanger Abbey. Afterword David Pinching. London: Macmillan Collector’s Library, 2016. 
  • _____. Persuasion. Afterword Henry Hitchings. London: Macmillan Collector’s Library, 2016. 
  • _____. Pride and Prejudice. Afterword Henry Hitchings. London: Macmillan Collector’s Library, 2016. 
  • _____. Pride and Prejudice. 4th ed. Ed. Donald Gray and Mary A. Favret. New York: Norton, 2016. Norton Critical Editions. 
  • _____. Pride and Prejudice. Illus. Ellie Fabe. [N.p.]: Beauty Panic, 2016. Limited edition. Illustrated with vintage magazine images from the 1930s. 
  • _____. Sanditon, Lady Susan, and The History of England: The Juvenilia and Shorter Works of Jane Austen. Afterword Kathryn White. London: Macmillan Collector’s Library, 2016. 
  • _____. Sense and Sensibility. Afterword Henry Hitchings. London: Macmillan Collector’s Library, 2016. 
  • _____. Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice. London: Arcturus, 2016. Perfect Partners. Slipcase edition. 
  • Bentinck, Anna, narr. Mansfield Park. By Jane Austen. Holland, OH: Dreamscape, 2016. Audio CD. 
  • Jane Austen: The BBC Radio Drama Collection. London: BBC Worldwide 2016. BBC Radio Full-Cast Dramatizations of all six novels, with Benedict Cumberbatch, David Tennant, Julia McKenzie, Jenny Agutter, Toby Jones, Eve Best, and Juliet Stevenson. Audio CD. 
  • Klett, Elizabeth, narr. Persuasion. By Jane Austen. [N.p.]: Essential Audiobooks, 2016. Audio. 
  • Landor, Rosalyn, narr. Persuasion. By Jane Austen. Holland, OH: Dreamscape, 2016. Audio CD. 
  • _____, narr. Pride and Prejudice. By Jane Austen. Holland, OH: Dreamscape, 2016. Audio CD. 
  • _____, narr. Sense and Sensibility. By Jane Austen. Holland, OH: Dreamscape, 2016. Audio CD. 
  • Larkin, Alison, narr. Emma. By Jane Austen. Ashland, OR: Blackstone/Recorded Books, 2016. Audio CD. 200th anniversary audio edition. 
  • _____, narr. Pride and Prejudice. By Jane Austen. Ashland, OR: Blackstone/Recorded Books, 2016. Audio CD. With songs from Regency England. 
  • Lynch, Deidre Shauna, ed. Mansfield Park: An Annotated Edition. By Jane Austen. Cambridge: Belknap-Harvard UP, 2016. 
  • O’Brien, Catherine, narr. Pride and Prejudice. By Jane Austen. [N.p.]: Essential Audiobooks, 2016. Audio DC. 
  • West, Norma, narr. Lady Susan; The Watsons; Sanditon. Oxford: Isis Audio, 2016. Audio CD.

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2. Austen Circle

  • Bullamore, Tim. “Oh, Diana!” JARW 80 (2016): 14-19. The story of Diana Shervington, Austen family descendant.
  • Cole, Helen, et al. Chawton House Library. London: Scala Arts and Heritage, 2016. Guidebook to the Library. Tells of the Austen family connection to Chawton House and of the works of the women writers who were Jane Austen’s contemporaries now housed in the Library.
  • Hurst, Jane. “‘Dr. Hooper’s Female Pills’: Did ‘Alton Apothecary’ William Curtis Ever Prescribe These to Jane Austen?” JAS Report (2016): 52-54.
  • Jones, Hazel. “Worthy of Mention: George Knight and Hilare, Countess Nelson.” JAS Report (2016): 16-22.
  • Kindred, Sheila Johnson. “Fanny Palmer Austen: Her Silhouette and Its Significance.” JAS Report (2016): 23-27.
  • Lane, Maggie. “The Real Lady Susan.” JARW 83 (2016): 47-50. Eliza de Feuillide as the real-life model for Austen’s Lady Susan.
  • _____. “Shipwreck and Bankruptcy.” JARW 82 (2016): 27-30. About the calamities that befell the Austen family in 1816.
  • Le Faye, Deirdre. “Edward Knight’s Grand Tour.” JAS Report (2016): 28-36.
  • Livingstone, Linda, and Sylvia McNally. “White Friars, Canterbury, or Downsizing in 1799.” JAS Report (2016): 42-46. About Mrs. Catherine Knight.
  • Patterson, Amy. “The Sun of My Life.” Joy of Jane 22-31. About Jane Austen and her sister, Cassandra.
  • Stove, Judy. The Missing Monument Murders. London: Waterside, 2016. Tells the scandalous tale of the Reverend Thomas Leigh.
  • _____. “Scandal at Stoneleigh.” JARW 83 (2016): 29-32. A synopsis of the tale of the Leigh family from the author’s book The Missing Monument Murders.
  • Thwaite, Alan. “Jane Austen’s Green Park Neighbors.” JAS Report (2016): 55-62.

break graphic3. Austen Studies

  • Abraham, Margi. “The Subversive Lady Susan.” Sensibilities 53 (2016): 20-36. 
  • Ackland, Michael. “‘What are Men to Rocks and Mountains?’ Self-Interest, Civility and the Unnameable in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice.” Colomba 159-74. 
  • Adams, Carol J. “Austen for Caregivers.” JARW 83 (2016): 35-38. Austen as solace and comfort for caregivers from the trenches of World War I to the present. 
  • Aers, David. “Community and Morality: Towards Reading Jane Austen.” Romanticism and Ideology: Studies in English Writing 1765-1830. Ed. David Aers, Jonathan Cook, and David Punter. 1981. London; New York: Routledge, 2016. 118-36. 
  • Armstrong, Isobel. “Reading for Democratic Imaginations: Inquiry, Form, and Illegitimate Children.” Novel Politics: Democratic Imaginations in Nineteenth-Century Fiction. Oxford; New York: Oxford UP, 2016. 141-81. This chapter looks at three novels with illegitimate children: Austen’s Emma, Wilkie Collins’s No Name, and George Eliot’s Daniel Deronda.
  • Balfour, Ian. “Free Indirect Filmmaking: Jane Austen and the Renditions (On Emma among Its Others).” Constellations of a Contemporary Romanticism. Ed. Jacques Khalip and Forest Pyle. New York: Fordham UP, 2016. 248-66. 
  • Bander, Elaine. “Catherine Morland: Philosopher.” Sensibilities 52 (2016): 26-39. 
  • _____. “‘Liking’ Emma Woodhouse.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 13-29. 
  • _____. “‘To Read Novels Together’: Catherine Morland’s Reading Tastes in Northanger Abbey.” Sensibilities 52 (2016): 8-25. 
  • Bane, Charles. “‘The Middle Classes at Play’: Austen and Marx Go to Hollywood.” Marinucci 145-55. 
  • Barchas, Janine, and Kristina Straub. “Curating Will and Jane.” Eighteenth-Century Life 40.2 (2016): 1-35. About the Shakespeare/Austen exhibit at the Folger Library in 2016. 
  • Barnum, Deborah. “Jane Austen Bibliography, 2015.” Persuasions On-Line 37.1 (2016). Web. 
  • Bebris, Carrie. “A Master’s Legacy to Novelists.” Joy of Jane 60-67. 
  • Benario, Herbert W. “Jane Austen the Latinist.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 186-88. 
  • Benditt, Theodore. “Jane Austen and Pride.” ANQ: A Quarterly Journal of Short Articles, Notes and Reviews 29.2 (2016): 62-66.
  • Bennett Daylight, Tegan. “Pride and Prejudice: Always Contemporary.” Colomba 23-29. 
  • Bentley, G. E. “Genteel Finances in Jane Austen’s Novels.” Notes and Queries 63.2 (2016): 230-33. 
  • Berthin, Christine. Feuilletage du sens: Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility. Nanterre: Presses Universitaires de Paris Ouest, 2016. French text. 
  • Bianchi, Francesca. “Subtitling Jane Austen: Pride and Prejudice by Joe Wright.” Colomba 253-65. 
  • Birch, Chris. “Jane Austen, Dominic Serres, Princess Olive of Cumberland, Graf von Moltke: Unexpected Encounters of an Interesting Kind.” Genealogists’ Magazine 32.4 (2016): 146-50. 
  • Birke, Dorothee. “The Institutionalization of Novel Reading: Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey.” Writing the Reader: Configurations of a Cultural Practice in the English Novel. Berlin; Boston: de Gruyter, 2016. 91-125. Linguae and Litterae 59. 
  • Birns, Nicholas. “On His First Entering a Neighborhood: Juxtaposition in Pride and Prejudice.” Colomba 103-17. 
  • Booth, Allison. “Country Houses, Gothic, and Tourism with Jane Austen.” Homes and Haunts: Touring Writers’ Shrines and Countries. Oxford; New York: Oxford UP, 2016. 38-41. 
  • Brand, Emily. “Jane Austen’s Literary Legacy.” Joy of Jane 52-59. 
  • Bray, Joe. “Jane Austen: The Subjectivity of ‘Likeness.’” The Portrait in Fiction of the Romantic Period. London; New York: Routledge, 2016. 115-44. 
  • _____. “The Language of Portraiture in the Early Nineteenth-Century Novel: A Study in Opie and Austen.” Women’s Writing 23.1 (2016): 53-67. 
  • Bree, Linda. “‘In a State of Alteration, Perhaps of Improvement’: Form and Feeling in Persuasion.” Women’s Writing 23.3 (2016): 390-400. Spec. issue: Festschrift in Honor of Janet Todd: A Life in Feminist Scholarship
  • Brick, Dianne. “Most Precious Treasures: Tunbridge Ware from the Time of Jane Austen.” JAS Report (2016): 47-51.
  • Bronzini, Stefano. “Repairing the Irreparable: ‘The Slit in the Worked Muslin Gown.’” Colomba 119-30. 
  • Brooks, Jeanice. “In Search of Austen’s ‘Missing Songs.’” Review of English Studies 67.282 (2016): 914–45. 
  • Brtan, Lidija. “Hibridni Roman: Visoka Književnost u Novom Ruhu.” [“Hybrid Novel: High Literature in a New Cloak”]. Književna Smotra 48. 1 (2016): 53-62. Serbo-Croatian text. Discusses Seth Grahame-Smith’s Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.
  • Brudney, Daniel. “The Breadth of Moral Character.” Fictional Characters, Real Problems: The Search for Ethical Content in Literature. Ed. Garry L. Hagberg. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2016. 254-81. Compares Austen’s Pride and Prejudice and E. M. Forster’s Howard’s End
  • Bu, Jiemin. “A Semantic Study of Tense Backshift and Its Literary Effects in FID. “Journal of Literary Semantics 45.1 (2016): 49-75. Compares Virginia Woolf’s use of free indirect discourse with that in Austen’s Persuasion and Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim
  • Bufacchi, Vittorio. “Love in the Time of Epistemic Injustice.” Marinucci 3-14.
  • Bui, L. Bao. “Epistolary Culture in Emma: Secrets and Social Transgressions.” Persuasions On-Line 37.1 (2016). Web. 
  • Cantwell, Nancy Marck. “‘Pictures of Perfection Make Me Sick and Wicked’: Privilege and Parody in Emma.” Marinucci 133-44.
  • Canuel, Mark. “Jane Austen, the Romantic Novel, and the Importance of Being Wrong.” The Shadow of Death: Literature, Romanticism, and the Subject of Punishment. 2007. Princeton: Princeton UP, 2016. 81-114. 
  • Cardinale, Alison. “Emma, For and Against: Do You Love Her or Loathe Her? A Debate: Third Speaker for the Government.” Sensibilities 52 (2016): 105-09. 
  • Cavagnoli, Franca. “Decorum and Deviance in the Italian Translations of Pride and Prejudice.” Colomba 55-68. 
  • Chawton House Library. Female Spectator. New Series. 2.1-4 (2016). Ed. Helen Thirlway. Alton, UK: Chawton House Library, 2016.
  • Chira, Susan. “The Comforts of Jane.” New York Times Book Review 25 Dec. 2016: 25(L). 
  • Christie, William. The Two Romanticisms and Other Essays: Mystery and Interpretation in Romantic Literature. Sydney: Sydney UP, 2016. See ch. 1: “Coleridge, Austen, and the Two Romanticisms” and ch. 6: “Interpreting the Politics of Pride and Prejudice.” 
  • Clark, Chris. “Henry’s Mythology of Perfection: The Troublesome Biographical Notice.” Sensibilities 53 (2016): 37-54.
  • Clark, Lorraine. “Influence and Interference: The Ethics of Attention in Emma.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 56-65. 
  • Clifford, Katrina. “Was There a Model for Elizabeth Bennet? Charlotte Lennox’s Henrietta.” Sensibilities 53 (2016): 5-19. 
  • Colomba, Caterina. “Dis/covering Characters: Clothes and Clothing in Pride and Prejudice and its Filmic Adaptations.” Colomba 267-81. 
  • _____. Introduction. Colomba 13-19. 
  • _____, ed. Pride and Prejudice: A Bicentennial Bricolage. Udine: Forum Editrice Universitaria Udinese, 2016. Essays are individually cited.
  • Concannon, Philip. “The Wicked Lady.” Sight and Sound June 2016: 17-21. An interview with Whit Stillman on his Love and Friendship film adaptation of Lady Susan
  • Considine, Allison. “Welcome to Austenland: Move over, Dickens: Jane Austen Is Theatre’s New Literary Brand.” American Theatre July/Aug 2016: 48-51. 
  • Cooper, Liz Philosophos. “The Apothecary and the Physician: Emma’s Mr. Perry.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 131-36. 
  • Coyne, Kelly. “Courtship and Financial Interest in Northanger Abbey.” Persuasions On-Line 37.1 (2016). Web.
  • Crozier, W. Ray. “The Blush: Literary and Psychological Perspectives.” Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 46.4 (2016): 502-16. Literary analysis of the blush in Austen’s novels. Also on the Web. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jtsb.12105/full
  • Curry, Mary Jane. “‘Exquisite’ Nature: Serious Pastoral in Emma.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 107-15. 
  • Dadlez, E. M. “Jane Austen on Moral Luck.” Marinucci 95-105. 
  • Dakers, Caroline. “Land Agents: Fact and Fiction in the Long Nineteenth Century.” The Land Agent in Britain: Past, Present and Future. Ed. Carol Beardmore, Steven King, and Geoff Monks. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars, 2016. 59-86. Discusses Jane Austen, Elizabeth Gaskell, and George Eliot. 
  • Dashwood, Rita J. “Jane Austen Studies 2016.” JAS Report (2016): 63-64. 
  • _____. “Women Owning Property: The Great Lady in Jane Austen.” Marinucci 107-20. 
  • Davis, Jocelyn. “Talent: Jane Austen.” The Greats on Leadership: Classic Wisdom for Modern Managers. London; Boston: Nicholas Brealey, 2016. See ch. 20. 
  • Davis, Kathryn E. Liberty in Jane Austen’s Persuasion. Bethlehem: Lehigh UP; Lanham: Rowman, 2016. 
  • Dawson, Richard. “‘The Power of Conversation’: Jane Austen’s Persuasion and Hans-Georg Gadamer’s Philosophical Hermeneutics.” Fictional Characters, Real Problems: The Search for Ethical Content in Literature. Ed. Garry L. Hagberg. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2016. 194-208. 
  • De Groot, Jerome. “Lost in Austen, the Gaze, and the Pleasures of the Text.” Remaking History: The Past in Contemporary Historical Fictions. London; New York: Routledge, 2016. 170-74. 
  • De Leo, Maddalena. “What Jane Austen Might Have Said about the Brontës … in a Letter.” Brontë Studies 42.1 (2016): 74-75. 
  • DeWees, Shelley. Not Just Jane: Rediscovering Seven Amazing Women Writers Who Transformed British Literature. New York: HarperCollins, 2016. The introduction is about Jane Austen. 
  • Dooley, Gillian. “‘The Bells Rang and Every Body Smiled’: Jane Austen’s ‘Courtship Novels.’” Persuasions On-Line 37.1 (2016). Web.
  • _____. “‘Capacity, and Taste, and Application, and Elegance’: Music in Jane Austen’s Life and Work.” Colomba 193-205. 
  • Dougherty, Kathleen Poorman. “Marriage and Friendship in Jane Austen: Self-knowledge, Virtue, and the ‘Second Self.’” Marinucci 53-65.
  • Dow, Gillian. “The ‘Biographical Impulse’ and Pan-European Women’s Writing.” Women’s Writing, 1660-1830: Feminisms and Futures. Ed. Jennie Batchelor and Gillian Dow. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016. 203-23. Some discussion of Austen publishing anonymously. 
  • _____. “Jane Austen’s Emma at 200: From English Village to Global Appeal.” Persuasions On-Line 37.1 (2016). Web.
  • Dromm, Keith, and Heather Salter. “Persuasion, Influence, and Over-Persuasion.” Marinucci 167-78. 
  • Easton, Celia A. “‘The Encouragement I Received’: Emma and the Language of Sexual Assault.” Persuasions On-Line 37.1 (2016). Web. 
  • Emsley, Sarah, ed. “Emma in the Snow.” SarahEmsley.com, 2016. A collection of essays by various authors celebrating the bicentenary of Emma. Web. https://sarahemsley.com/celebrating-austen-wharton-and-montgomery/emma-in-the-snow/.
  • Evans, James E. “The ‘Northern Tour’ in Pride and Prejudice: Another Model.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 189-96. Also on the Web.
  • Faflak, Joel. “Jane Austen, Percy Shelley, and Felix Britannica.” The Regency Revisited. Ed. Tim Fulford and Michael E. Sinatra. Basingstoke; New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016. 31-46. 
  • Fergus, Jan. “‘Pictures of Domestic Life in Country Villages’: Jane Austen and the ‘Realist’ Novel.” Oxford Handbook of the Eighteenth-Century Novel. Ed. J. A. Downie. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2016. 536-50. 
  • Feuillebois, Victoire. “Victimes du livre? Dangers et vertus de la lecture empathique chez Jane Austen, Pouchkine, et Balzac.” [“Victims of the Book? Dangers and Virtues of Empathic Reading by Jane Austen, Pushkin, and Balzac”]. Romantisme 174.4 (2016): 101-10. French text. 
  • Fischer-Mahr, Sabine. Jane Austen’s Romane in Kino und Fernsehverfilmungen, 1940-2009: eine exemplarische Analyse von Adaptionen weiblicher Entwicklungsromane anhand des Selbstbild-Fremdbild-Modells. [Jane Austen’s Novels in Cinema and Television Filming, 1940-2009: An Exemplary Analysis of Adaptations of Female Developmental Novels by Means of the Self-Image Alien Image Model]. Trier, Ger.: Wissenschaftlicher, 2016. Mainz University Studies in English. German text. 
  • Fitzpatrick Hanly, Margaret Ann. “Sibling Rivalry, Separation, and Change in Austen’s Sense and Sensibility.” International Journal of Psychoanalysis 97.4 (2016): 1057-75.
  • Fletcher, Angus, and John Monterosso. “The Science of Free-Indirect Discourse: An Alternate Cognitive Effect.” Narrative 24.1 (2016): 82-103. Discusses Austen’s use of FID, especially in Pride and Prejudice and Emma
  • Folger Shakespeare Library. Will and Jane: Shakespeare, Austen and the Cult of Celebrity. Washington, DC: Folger, 2016. Catalogue of the exhibition, 6 Aug.-6 Nov. 2016, curated by Janine Barchas and Kristina Straub with assistance from Georgianna Ziegler. 
  • Folsom, Marcia McClintock. “Emma: Knowing Her Mind.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 41-55. 
  • Ford, Susan Allen. “‘Not What You Would Think Anything of’: Robert Martin and Harriet Smith.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 137-54. 
  • Friday, Penelope. “Lust and Attraction.” Joy of Jane 112-21. 
  • Fullerton, Susannah. “Pilgrim’s Progress.” Joy of Jane 78-87. 
  • Gaston, Lise. “Gossip Economies: Jane Austen, Lady Susan, and the Right to Self-Fashion.” European Romantic Review 27.3 (2016): 405-11. 
  • Gibson, Suzie. “Love, Marriage, and Dialectics in the Novels of Jane Austen.” Marinucci 27-37. 
  • Gilbey, Ryan. “The Book of the Movie of the Book: Whit Stillman’s Postmodern Love Letter to Jane Austen.” New Statesman 27 May 2016: 52-53. 
  • Gill, Linda. “Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey: Gender, Discourse, and Power.” Commanding Words: Essays on the Discursive Constructions, Manifestations, and Subversions of Authority. Ed. Lynda Chouiten. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars, 2016. 232-46.
  • Gilmore, Richard. “The Language Games of Persuasion.” Marinucci 179-91. 
  • Gjerlevsen, Simona Zetterberg. “A Novel History of Fictionality.” Narrative 24.2 (2016): 174-89. Analyzes passages related to fictionality in Henry Fielding’s Tom Jones, Horace Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto, and Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey.
  • Goldman, Alan H. “Moral Development in Pride and Prejudice.” Fictional Characters, Real Problems: The Search for Ethical Content in Literature. Ed. Garry L. Hagberg. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2016. 237-53. 
  • Goodley, Penelope. “Emma, For and Against: Do You Love Her or Loathe Her? A Debate: First Speaker for the Opposition.” Sensibilities 52 (2016): 93-95. 
  • Grace, Maria. Courtship and Marriage in Jane Austen’s World. [Author]: White Soup, 2016. 
  • Graham, Peter W. “Childe Harold and Fitzwilliam Darcy, or a Tale of Two 200-Year-Old Heroes.” Colomba 89-100. 
  • Grayson, Siobhán, et al. “The Sense and Sensibility of Different Sliding Windows in Constructing Co-occurrence Networks from Literature.” Computational History and Data-Driven Humanities. Ed. Bojan Bozic, et al. Cham, Switz: IFIP/Springer Nature, 2016. 65-77. [Second IFIP WG 12.7 International Workshop, CHDDH 2016, Dublin, Ireland, May 25, 2016]. Discusses the six novels of Jane Austen and three by Charles Dickens.
  • Green, Nile. The Love of Strangers: What Six Muslim Students Learned in Jane Austen’s London. Princeton: Princeton UP, 2016. Numerous references to Austen throughout. 
  • Greenfield, Sayre. “The Source for the Theatricals of Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park: A Discovery.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 197-204. 
  • Gutowska, Anna. “Between ‘Silly Novels’ and Vegetation Myths: George Eliot’s Subversive Use of the Two Suitors Convention in Middlemarch.” George Eliot Review: Journal of the George Eliot Fellowship 47 (2016): 36-43. Compares the ‘girl with two lovers’ motif with Austen’s use of this convention. 
  • Hall, Lynda A. “Teaching Jane Austen in the Twenty-First Century: How to Embrace the Popular Jane while Respecting the Literary Austen.” Colomba 45-53. 
  • Hans, Simran. “Jane Austen Adaptations.” Sight and Sound June 2016: 9. 
  • Haque, Farhana. “An Aspect of Colonialism and Anti-Colonialism: A Comparative Study between the Traces of British Imperialism in English Literature and the Counterpoint of Anti-Colonialism in Bengali Literature of 19th Century.” Advances in Language and Literary Studies 7.5 (2016): 85-90. Discusses Mansfield Park
  • Hartung, Heike. “Age Reversal and Physiological Bildung: Pain and Pleasure in Jane Austen’s Persuasion.” Ageing, Gender, and Illness in Anglophone Literature: Narrating Age in the Bildungsroman. New York: Routledge, 2016. 129-42. Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature. 
  • Haykin, Michael A. G. “The Christian Faith of Jane Austen: ‘The Value of that Holy Religion.’” Eight Women of Faith. Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2016. See ch. 8. 
  • Holdier, A. G. “‘Till This Moment I Never Knew Myself’: On Identities and Zombies.” Marinucci 219-28. 
  • Horn, Dashielle. “Choosing Spinsterhood: Enacting Singleness in Persuasion.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 236-44. 
  • Horner, Anne. “Austen and the Zombies.” JARW 79 (2016): 46-51. About the film Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.
  • Ingrassia, Catherine. “Emma, Slavery, and Cultures of Captivity.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 95-106.
  • James, Kerry, and Pamela Whalan. “‘Mr. Knightley Must Marry No One but Herself.’” Sensibilities 53 (2016): 68-80.
  • Jane Austen Society. News Letter: The Jane Austen Society 46, 47 (2016). Ed. Maggie Lane and Mary Hogg. 
  • _____. Report for 2016 (2016). Ed. Maggie Lane and Mary Hogg. Essays are individually cited. 
  • Jane Austen Society (Kent Branch). Austentations 16 (2016). Ed. Averil Clayton. 
  • Jane Austen Society (Midlands Branch). Transactions 27 (2016). Ed. Dawn Thomas. 
  • Jane Austen Society (Northern Branch). Impressions (2016). Ed. Marilyn Joice. 
  • Jane Austen Society of Australia. JASA Chronicle (2016). Ed. Sue Green. 
  • _____. Sensibilities 52, 53 (2016). Ed. Joanna Penglase. Essays are individually cited. 
  • Jane Austen Society of North America. JASNA News 32.1-3 (2016). Ed. Sheryl Craig. 
  • _____. Persuasions: The Jane Austen Journal 38 (2016). Ed. Susan Allen Ford. Essays are individually cited. Table of Contents on the Web.
  • _____. Persuasions: The Jane Austen Journal On-Line 37.1 (2016). Ed. Susan Allen Ford. Web. Essays are individually cited. 
  • Jane Austen’s Regency World [JARW]. Ed. Tim Bullamore. Bath: Lansdown, 2016. Issues 79-84. Austen-related articles are individually cited.
  • Jehmlich, Reimer. Jane Austen. 1995. Darmstadt, Ger.: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 2016. German text. A reprint of this title, which analyzes Austen research from 1812 to the present, to include the previously neglected German research. 
  • Jenkyns, Richard. “Conclusion: The Joy of Jane.” Joy of Jane 122-27. 
  • Jones, Amanda. “Three Young Men: John Thorpe.” Sensibilities 52 (2016): 41-51. 
  • Jones, Eileen. “Jane Austen, Class Warrior.” In These Times June 2016: 36-37. A review of Whit Stillman’s Love and Friendship
  • Jones, Marjorie. “Jane Collier and The Art of Ingeniously Tormenting.” Sensibilities 53 (2016): 55-67. 
  • Jones, Susan E. “Oysters and Alderneys: Emma and the Animal Economy.” Persuasions On-Line 37.1 (2016). Web. 
  • The Joy of Jane, 1775-1817: Thoughts on the First 200 Years of Austen’s Legacy. Introd. Maggie Lane. Foreword Tim Bullamore. Edinburgh: Lansdown, 2016. Essays are individually cited. 
  • “Kate Beckinsale Talks Film Adaptation of Jane Austen’s ‘Edgy’ Novella ‘Love & Friendship.’” Weekend Edition Saturday. Natl. Public Radio, 14 May 2016. Radio. 
  • Kelly, Gary. “Pride and Prejudice, Gendered Modernity, and the Novel.” Colomba 175-91. 
  • Kelly, Helena. “Query: What Might Have Led Christopher Wordsworth to Intercept a Letter Written by Charles Austen?” Notes and Queries 63.4 (2016): 636. 
  • Kenney, Theresa M. “Benevolence and Sympathy in Emma.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 66-80. 
  • Kertzer, Jon. “Literature and Law: Consensus and the Art of Disagreement.” University of Toronto Quarterly: A Canadian Journal of the Humanities 85.2 (2016): 1-24. Discusses Jane Austen’s use of irony in the service of critical taste. 
  • Ketcham, Christopher. “Deconstructing Entailment.” Marinucci 121-32.
  • Keymer, Thomas. “Afterword.” Mediating Richardson. Ed. Louise Curran and Sören Hammerschmidt. Spec. issue of Eighteenth-Century Fiction 29.2 (2016-17): 317-25. Discusses Northanger Abbey and Samuel Richardson’s Sir Charles Grandison
  • Kim, Insook. “No Alternative to Marriage? Reading Jane Austen through Virginia Woolf’s ‘Phyllis and Rosamond.’” Journal of Modern British and American Language and Literature 34.1 (2016): 55-78.
  • Kincheloe, Arleigh. “On Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen.” The Books That Changed My Life: Reflections by 100 Authors, Actors, Musicians, and Other Remarkable People. Ed. Bethanne Kelly Patrick. New York: Regan Arts, 2016. 131-32. Austen also gets a mention by Eric Idle. 
  • King, Rachael Scarborough. “The Pleasures of ‘The World’: Rewriting Epistolarity in Burney, Edgeworth, and Austen.” Eighteenth-Century Fiction 29.1 (2016): 67-89. 
  • Klenck, Deborah J. Knuth. “Discourse in Emma: The Long and Short of It.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 213-17. 
  • Konchar Farr, Cecilia. “Lost in a Chick Lit Austenland.” The Ulysses Delusion: Rethinking Standards of Literary Merit. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016. 77-88. 
  • Kudish, Adele. “‘Emotions so Compounded of Pleasure and Pain’: Affective Contradiction in Jane Austen’s Persuasion.” Explicator 74.2 (2016): 120-24.
  • Kutcher, Gerald. “Geoffrey Keynes’s Two-Fold Vision: Medical Savant-Connoisseur and Literary Bibliographer.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 71.4 (2016): 377-99. Discusses Jane Austen’s first bibliographer. 
  • Labbe, Jacqueline M. “Pathological Sensibility.” Women’s Writing 23.3 (2016): 354-65. Spec. issue: Festschrift in Honor of Janet Todd: A Life in Feminist Scholarship. Discusses treatment of sensibility in Charlotte Smith and Jane Austen. 
  • Lane, Maggie. “The Hair Was Curled.” JARW 79 (2016): 30-33. Discusses fashionable coiffures in the novels.
  • _____. “Needlework in the Novels.” JARW 80 (2016): 42-45. 
  • _____. On the Sofa with Jane Austen. Wiltshire, UK: Robert Hale, 2016. A collection of articles that first appeared in Jane Austen’s Regency World magazine. 
  • _____. “What’s in a Name?” JARW 81 (2016): 18-22. Traces the history of the names of the new British princess, Charlotte Elizabeth Diana, and how Austen uses these names. 
  • Langbauer, Laurie. “The Romance of Youth: Jane Austen, Prophecy, and ‘the Natural Sequel of an Unnatural Beginning.’” The Juvenile Tradition: Young Writers and Prolepsis, 1750-1835. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2016. 160-86. 
  • LaRocca, David. “The Last Great Representative of the Virtues: MacIntyre after Austen.” Marinucci 81-94. 
  • Larrow, Michele. “‘Could He Even Have Seen into Her Heart’: Mr. Knightley’s Development of Sympathy.” Persuasions On-Line 37.1 (2016). Web. 
  • Le Faye, Deirdre. “The Final Year.” Joy of Jane 10-21. 
  • _____. “Images of Jane.” Joy of Jane 88-101. 
  • Lee, Michael Parrish. “Novel Appetites: Jane Austen and the ‘Nothing’ of Food.” The Food Plot in the Nineteenth-Century British Novel. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016. 21-42. See also Austen references throughout the book.
  • Levitt, Dobra. “Parental Relationships in Jane Austen’s Novels: New Perceptions on Rereading.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 181-85. 
  • Lewis, Stephen. “Austen Comes to Alton.” JARW 81 (2016): 16-17.
  • Liao, Yung-Chao. “When Muskets Join Forces with Katanas: Revisiting the Politics of Hybridity and Female Subjectivity in Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.” NTU Studies in Language and Literature 36 (2016): 101-29.
  • Lincoln, Margarette. “Scenes from Provincial Life: Historicizing Jane Austen’s Novels.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 245-54. 
  • Lindenmuth, William A. “Beyond Pride and Prejudice: Jane Austen and Friedrich Nietzsche on What Makes a Happy Marriage.” Marinucci 38-51. 
  • Looser, Devoney. “Inspiring Sense and Sensibility.” JARW 80 (2016): 47-50. Discusses the similarities between Sense and Sensibility and Jane West’s A Gossip’s Story
  • Maioli, Roger. “Varieties of Propositionalism: Lennox, Austen, Godwin.” Empiricism and the Early Theory of the Novel: Fielding to Austen. Cham, Switz.: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016. 93-135. Discusses Northanger Abbey, 106-117.
  • Malone, Meaghan. “Jane Austen’s Balls: Emma’s Dance of Masculinity.” Nineteenth-Century Literature 70.4 (2016): 427-47. 
  • Mandal, Anthony. “Two Centuries of Pride and Prejudice: Why Celebrate?” Colomba 31-44. 
  • “Mark Takano Thinks Gay Men Can Learn from Jane Austen.” New York Times Magazine 3 July 2016: 50. 
  • Marinucci, Mimi. “Introduction: ‘How Much Sooner One Tires of Anything’ than of Jane Austen.” Marinucci xi-xv.
  • _____, ed. Jane Austen and Philosophy. Lanham: Rowman, 2016. Great Authors and Philosophy. Essays are individually cited. 
  • Marsh, Kelly A. The Submerged Plot and the Mother’s Pleasure from Jane Austen to Arundhati Roy. Columbus: Ohio State UP, 2016. Theory and Interpretation of Narrative Series. 
  • Mathews, Peter. “The Reluctant Character of Mr. Darcy: Pride and Prejudice and the Rise of the Novel.” Columba 131-46. 
  • McCloskey, Deirdre N. “It Is a Truth Universally Acknowledged That Even Dr. Johnson and Jane Austen Exhibit the Revaluation.” Bourgeois Equality: How Ideas, Not Capital or Institutions, Enriched the World. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 2016. See ch. 17. 
  • McInnes, Andrew. “Labyrinths of Conjecture: The Gothic Elsewhere in Jane Austen’s Emma.” Gothic Studies 18.1 (2016): 71-84. 
  • McMaster, Juliet. “The Critics of Talk in Emma.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 30-40. 
  • _____. Jane Austen, Young Author. London; New York: Ashgate, Routledge, 2016. 
  • Mellet, Laurent. “Sense and Sensibility à l’écran: l’adaptation entre explication et consolation.” [“Sense and Sensibility on Screen: Adaptation between Explanation and Consolation”]. New Perspectives on Film Adaptations of 19th-Century Novels and Short Stories. Spec. issue of Cahiers Victoriens et Édouardiens 82 (2016). Web. https://cve.revues.org/2361
  • Mera, Miguel. “Searching for Truth in the Music for Pride and Prejudice: Dario Marianelli in Conversation with Miguel Mera.” Colomba 283-98.
  • Messina, Henna Marian. “Fanny Price’s Domestic Assemblages in Austen’s Mansfield Park.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 205-12.
  • Miles, Robert. “Renewing the Estate: Mansfield Park and the Berkeley Peerage Affair.” The Regency Revisited. Ed. Tim Fulford and Michael E. Sinatra. Basingstoke; New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016. 47-62.
  • Moe, Melina. “Charlotte and Elizabeth: Multiple Modernities in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice.” ELH 83.4 (2016): 1075-103. 
  • Montz, Amy L. “The Personal Is Pilgrimage: Literary Tourism through and with Ms. Austen and Mrs. Gaskell.” Gaskell Journal 30 (2016): 57-77.
  • Moore, Jane. “Pattern and Romantic Creativity.” Charles Lamb Bulletin 163 (2016): 4-25. Discusses the treatment of needlework and its relationship to creativity, focusing on Mary Lamb and William Wordsworth, as well as briefly considering Jane Austen. 
  • Moore, Roger E. Jane Austen and the Reformation: Remembering the Sacred Landscape. London; New York: Routledge, 2016.
  • Morini, Massimiliano. Jane Austen’s Narrative Techniques: A Stylistic and Pragmatic Analysis. 2009. London: Routledge, 2016. 
  • Morris, Ivor. Mr. Darcy in Love and Other Jane Austen Studies. Winchester, UK: [Author], Sarsen, 2016. 
  • Morton, Anna. “Emma’s ‘Serious Spirit’: How Miss Woodhouse Faces the Issues Raised in Mansfield Park and Becomes Jane Austen’s Most Complex Heroine.” Persuasions On-Line 37.1 (2016). Web. 
  • Moseley, Merritt. “New Facts about Jane Austen.” Sewanee Review 124.3 (2016): 488-90. 
  • Munganga, Bonaventure Muzigirwa. “Inference and Narrative Processing in Fiction and Film: (Where) (Does) Narrative Reading Part(s) Ways With Its Viewing and Vice Versa (?).” Cogent Arts and Humanities. 3.1 (2016). Web. Discusses the novel and two of the film versions of Pride and Prejudice. https://www.cogentoa.com/article/10.1080/23311983.2016.1252138
  • Murphy, Olivia. “Suffering Sea Changes: Jane Austen’s Afterlives and the Possibilities of a Late Style.” Late Style and Its Discontents: Essays in Art, Literature, and Music. Ed. Gordon McMullan and Sam Smiles. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2016. 147-57. 
  • Murray, Douglas. “Fanny Price Goes to the Opera: Jonathan Dove and Alasdair Middleton’s Mansfield Park.” Persuasions On-Line 37.1 (2016). Web. 
  • Murray, Jenni. “Jane Austen.” A History of Britain in 21 Women: A Personal Selection. London: Oneworld, 2016. See ch. 7.
  • Nash, Penelope. “Emma, For and Against: Do You Love Her or Loathe Her? A Debate: Second Speaker for the Opposition.” Sensibilities 52 (2016): 100-05. 
  • Nelson, Camilla. “Spooky Jane: Women, History, and Horror in Death Comes to Pemberley.” Adaptation 9.3 (2016): 377–92. Analyzes the BBC production of P. D. James’s novel. 
  • Nevins, Jess. The Victorian Bookshelf: An Introduction to 61 Essential Novels. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2016. Includes Emma and Pride and Prejudice
  • Newman, Hilary. “‘Mr. Weston’s Good Wine’: Jane Austen and T. F. Powys.” JAS Report (2016): 37-41. 
  • Nigro, Jeffrey A., and Andrea Cawelti. “Divas in the Drawing Room, or Italian Opera Comes to Highbury.” Persuasions On-Line 37.1 (2016). Web. 
  • Normandin, Shawn. “Speech, Writing, and Allegory in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice.” Concentric: Literary and Cultural Studies 42.1 (2016): 121-45. 
  • O’Brien, Lorraine. “Three Young Men: Frederick Tilney.” Sensibilities 52 (2016): 52-62.
  • Olson, Elizabeth, and Charles Taliaferro. “Do You Want to Know a Secret? The Immorality and Morality of Secrets and the Subversive Jane Austen.” Marinucci 157-66. 
  • Oswald, Ros. “The Pitifullest Old Spinet.” JARW 82 (2016): 39-42. Discusses Jane Fairfax’s Broadwood square pianoforte in Emma
  • Owen, David. “Conscripting Gentle Jane: Getting the Austen Treatment in the Great War.” Writings of Persuasion and Dissonance in the Great War. Ed. David Owen and Cristina Pividori. Leiden, Neth.; Boston: Brill/Rodopi, 2016. 31-45. DQR Studies in Literature 61. 
  • Palmer, Sally. B. “‘Self-Deceived, I Did Deceive You’: Confabulation in Emma.” CEA Critic 78.3 (2016): 356-62.
  • Pankhurst, Kate. “Jane Austen.” Fantastically Great Women Who Changed the World. London: Bloomsbury, 2016. Children’s book. 
  • Parey, Armelle. “AS: Poetic Justice, Endings and Epilogues in Sense and Sensibility.” Miranda 13 (2016). Web. Discusses the novel and the Ang Lee 1995 film adaptation. http://miranda.revues.org/9384
  • Patterson, Amy. “She Sells Film Deals.” JARW 80 (2016): 36-40. About Worthing as the setting for Sanditon and the upcoming movie Jane by the Sea
  • Penney, Christine. “Notes on Sales.” JAS Report (2016): 65-69. Auction sales of Austen material in 2016. 
  • Peraldo, Emmanuelle. “From Evelyn’s Practical Knowledge on Trees to Marianne’s ‘Passion for Dead Leaves’ in Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility: The Evolution of the Perception and Appreciation of Trees in England in the Long Eighteenth Century.” Etudes Anglaises 69.3 (2016): 334-59. 
  • Phillips, Natalie M. “Divided Attention: Characterization and Cognitive Richness in Jane Austen.” Distraction: Problems of Attention in Eighteenth-Century Literature. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 2016. 174-211. 
  • Pinto, Paige. “Replacing Jane: Fandom and Fidelity in Dan Zeff’s Lost in Austen." Persuasions On-Line 37.1 (2016). Web. 
  • Potzsch, Janelle. “Finding Happiness at Hartfield.” Marinucci 69-80. 
  • Raghuwanshi, Monika. “Human Relationship in the Novels of Jane Austen.” International Journal of Multidisciplinary Approach and Studies 3.3 (2016): 108-12. 
  • Reiff, Marija. “The ‘Fanny Price Wars’: Jane Austen’s Enlightenment Feminist and Mary Wollstonecraft.” Women’s Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal 45.1-4 (2016): 275-90. 
  • Ritchie, Fiona. “What Jane Saw’s Recreation of the Boydell Shakespeare Gallery in 1796.” Eighteenth-Century Fiction 28.3 (2016): 580-83. A review of What Jane Saw.
  • Riter, Amanda. “Dead and Alive: Austen’s Role in Mashup Literature.” Marinucci 193-204. 
  • Rohrbach, Emily. “Contingencies of the Future Anterior: Austen’s Persuasion.” Modernity’s Mist: British Romanticism and the Poetics of Anticipation. New York: Fordham UP, 2016. 106-33.
  • Ross, Deborah. “Jane Austen on Speed.” Spectator 28 May 2016: 52+. A review of Stillman’s Love and Friendship
  • Rothenberg, Molly Anne. “Jane Austen’s Wit-Craft.” Lacan, Psychoanalysis, and Comedy. Ed. Patricia Gherovici and Manya Steinkoler. New York: Cambridge UP, 2016. 184-205. 
  • Rowberry, Simon Peter. “Commonplacing the Public Domain: Reading the Classics Socially on the Kindle.” Language and Literature 25.3 (2016): 211-25. Examines the highlighting practices of Kindle readers of Austen’s Pride and Prejudice and Shakespeare’s Hamlet
  • Roy, Sohinee. “Beyond Crossover Films: Bride and Prejudice and the Problems of Representing Postcolonial India in a Neoliberal World.” Journal of Popular Culture 49.5 (2016): 984-1002. 
  • Rumbold, Kate. “Jane Austen and Eighteenth-Century Shakespeare.” Shakespeare and the Eighteenth-Century Novel: Cultures of Quotation from Samuel Richardson to Jane Austen. Cambridge; New York: Cambridge UP, 2016. 157-80. 
  • Russell, Adam. “Étude Comparative de L’emploi du Style indirect libre dans l’œuvre romanesque de Flaubert et d’Austen.” [“Comparative Study of the Use of the Free Indirect Style in the Novels of Flaubert and Austen”]. Journal of Language, Literature and Culture 63.1 (2016): 16-36. French text. 
  • Sabor, Peter. “Fashioning the Child Author: Reading Jane Austen’s Juvenilia.” Fashioning Childhood in the Eighteenth Century: Age and Identity. Ed. Anja Müller. 2006. Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2016. 199-209.
  • _____. “Jane Austen’s First Publication: Sophia Sentiment Revisited.” Women’s Writing 23.3 (2016): 401-12. Spec. issue: Festschrift in Honor of Janet Todd: A Life in Feminist Scholarship
  • Saglia, Diego. Leggere Austen. [Read Austen]. Roma: Carocci, 2016. Italian text.
  • Sales, Roger. Jane Austen and Representations of Regency England. 1996. London; New York: Routledge, 2016. 
  • Scanlon, Larry. “Chaucer, Film, and the Desert of the Real; or, Why Geoffrey Chaucer Will Never Be Jane Austen.” Chaucer on Screen: Absence, Presence, and Adapting the Canterbury Tales. Ed. Kathleen Coyne Kelly and Tison Pugh. Columbus: Ohio State UP, 2016. 45-55. Interventions: New Studies in Medieval Culture. 
  • Schaffer, Talia. Romance’s Rival: Familiar Marriage in Victorian Fiction. New York: Oxford UP, 2016. Discusses marriage and courtship in the works of Jane Austen, George Eliot, Charlotte Yonge, Margaret Oliphant, and others. 
  • Scott, James M. “‘If Art Could Tell’: A Miltonic Reading of Pride and Prejudice.” Persuasions On-Line 37.1 (2016). Web. 
  • Seeliger, Henriette-Juliane. “Looking for Mr. Darcy: The Role of the Viewer in Creating a Cultural Icon.” Persuasions On-Line 37.1 (2016). Web. 
  • Shen, Ann. “Jane Austen.” Bad Girls throughout History: 100 Remarkable Women Who Changed the World. San Francisco: Chronicle, 2016. 46-47. 
  • Silge, Julia. “If I Loved Natural Language Processing Less, I Might Be Able to Talk about It More.” Julia Silge.com, 2016. Web. Discusses natural language processing and sentiment analysis for Austen’s novels with links to a downloadable package for study. https://juliasilge.com/blog/if-i-loved-nlp-less/
  • Smilie, Ethan. “Curious Distinctions in Sense and Sensibility.” Persuasions On-Line 37.1 (2016). Web. 
  • Soloway, Anita. “The Darkness of Emma.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 81-94. 
  • Starck, Nigel. “Capturing Life, Not Death.” Joy of Jane 102-11. 
  • Steiner, Enit Karafili. Jane Austen: Northanger Abbey/Persuasion. London; New York: Palgrave, 2016. Readers’ Guides to Essential Criticism. 
  • _____. “Overcoming Perpetual Estrangement in Persuasion’s Heterotopia.” Anglia: Zeitschrift Für Englische Philologie 134.3 (2016): 373-90. 
  • Stern, William. “Pride and Protein.” Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease 39.2 (2016): 321-24. In Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, members of the Bennet family are either sensible or silly, and males are under-represented; this study searches for an underlying medical diagnosis that explains these features.
  • Stevens, Paul. “Raphael’s Condescension: Paradise Lost, Jane Austen, and the Secular Displacement of Grace.” Milton in the Long Restoration. Ed. Blair Hoxby and Ann Baynes Coiro. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2016. 531-53. 
  • Stove, Judy. “New Guides to Bath: Society and Scene in Northanger Abbey.” Sensibilities 52 (2016): 70-88. 
  • Sudan, Rajani. “‘Plaisters,’ Papers, and the Labor of Letters.” The Alchemy of Empire: Abject Materials and the Technologies of Colonialism. New York: Fordham UP, 2016. 123-48. This chapter discusses the use of “plaisters” and letter-writing in Emma
  • Sullivan, Margaret C. “Pewter and Praise.” Joy of Jane 42-51. 
  • Swartz, Clay. “Jane Austen [vs.] Caesar Augustus.” Who Wins? 100 Historical Figures Go Head-to-Head and You Decide the Winner! New York: Workman, 2016. 
  • Tandon, Bharat. “‘Labours Not Her Own’: Emma and the Invisible World.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 116-30. 
  • Taylor, Colleen. “Austen Answers the Irish Question: Satire, Anxiety, and Emma’s Allusory Ireland.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 218-27. 
  • Taylor, Jane. “‘Important Trifles’: Jane Austen, the Fashion Magazine, and Inter-Textual Consumer Experience.” History of Retailing and Consumption 2.2 (2016): 113-28. 
  • Teulade, Anne. “Réécritures de don Quichotte: Illusion et ironie dans Northanger Abbey de Jane Austen (1818) et Tristana de Benito Pérez Galdós (1892).” [“Rewritings of Don Quixote: Illusion and Irony in Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen (1818) and Tristana by Benito Pérez Galdós (1892).” La littérature dépliée: Reprise, répétition, réécriture. Ed. Jean-Paul Engélibert and Yen-Maï Tran-Gervat. 2008. Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2016. 95-104. Also on the Web. http://books.openedition.org/pur/35018
  • Thieme, John. “Talking about Talking: Conversation and Conduct in Pride and Prejudice.” Colomba 147-57. 
  • Todd, Janet. Preface. Colomba 11-12. About Pride and Prejudice
  • Toner, Anne. “Apophatic Austen: Speaking about Silence in Austen’s Fiction.” XVII-XVIII, Revue de la Société d'études anglo-américaines des XVII et XVIII siècles 73 (2016). Web. https://1718.revues.org/739
  • Trickett, Julie. “Emma, For and Against: Do You Love Her or Loathe Her? A Debate: Second Speaker for the Government.” Sensibilities 52 (2016): 95-100. 
  • Troost, Linda V. “Filming Tourism, Portraying Pemberley.” Colomba 209-31. 
  • Troost, Linda, and Sayre Greenfield. “Multimedia Emma: Three Adaptations.” Persuasions On-Line 37.1 (2016). Web.
  • Vickery, Amanda. “No Happy Ending? At Home with Miss Bates.” JAS Report (2016): 70-83. 
  • Villaseñor, Alice, and Ruth Blandón. “Austen Masala: Bride and Prejudice as Transcultural Adaptation.” Colomba 233-51. 
  • Voss, Tony. “Emma, For and Against: Do You Love Her or Loathe Her? A Debate: First Speaker for the Government.” Sensibilities 52 (2016): 90-93. 
  • Voyles, Katherine. “Austen at the Ends of the Earth: The Near and the Far in Persuasion." Persuasions On-Line 37.1 (2016). Web. 
  • Wainwright, Valerie. “Emma’s Extravagance: Jane Austen and the Character-Situation Debate.” Fictional Characters, Real Problems: The Search for Ethical Content in Literature. Ed. Garry L. Hagberg. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2016. 102-16. 
  • Wall, Cynthia. “‘The Little Words’: The Close Reading of Really Small Things.” Wordsworth Circle 47.2-3 (2016): 114-18. Discusses “the little, nameless, unremembered acts of prepositions and punctuation in the works of Samuel Richardson, Ann Radcliffe, and Jane Austen.” 
  • Walle, Taylor. “‘He Looked Quite Red’: Persuasion and Austen’s New Man of Feeling.” Eighteenth-Century Fiction 29.1 (2016): 45-66. 
  • Weaver-Hightower, Rebecca. “Pride, Prejudice, and Postcolonial Zombies.” Colomba 69-87. 
  • Wells, Juliette. “The 1816 Philadelphia Emma: A Forgotten Edition and Its Readers.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 155-78. 
  • Wenner, Barbara Britton. Prospect and Refuge in the Landscape of Jane Austen. 2006. London: Routledge, 2016. 
  • Werker, Anke. Jane Austen, Onder vier Ogen. [Jane Austen, through Four Eyes]. Amsterdam: Ambo/Anthos, 2016. Dutch text. The life and writing career of Jane Austen, seen through her own eyes and that of her sister, Cassandra. 
  • Whalan, Pamela. “Emma, For and Against: Do You Love Her or Loathe Her? A Debate: Third Speaker for the Opposition.” Sensibilities 52 (2016): 109-11.
  • “What If Pride and Prejudice Was Set in Cincinnati?” Weekend Edition Sunday. Natl. Public Radio, 17 Apr. 2016. Radio. 
  • Wheeler, David. “Acceptance or Anxiety? The Class Dynamics of Persuasion.” Persuasions 38 (2016): 228-35.
  • White, Laura Mooneyham, and Carmen Smith. “Discerning Voice through Austen Said: Free Indirect Discourse, Coding, and Interpretive (Un)Certainty.” Persuasions On-Line 37.1 (2016). Web. 
  • Wilkes, Joanne. Women Reviewing Women in Nineteenth-Century Britain: The Critical Reception of Jane Austen, Charlotte Brontë, and George Eliot. 2010. London: Routledge, 2016. 
  • Williamson, Ruth. “Letters: Their Legacy and Lure.” Joy of Jane 32-41. 
  • Wilson, Kim. “Closer to Jane.” Joy of Jane 68-77. 
  • Winkle, Sally. “Can There be Sense without Sensibility? The Middle Road to Love and Marriage in Jane Austen.” Marinucci 15-26. 
  • Wootton, Sarah. “Jane Austen’s Byronic Heroes I: Northanger Abbey and Sense and Sensibility.” Byronic Heroes in Nineteenth-Century Women’s Writing and Screen Adaptation. Basingstoke; New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016. 30-60. 
  • _____. “Jane Austen’s Byronic Heroes II: Persuasion and Pride and Prejudice.” Byronic Heroes in Nineteenth-Century Women’s Writing and Screen Adaptation. Basingstoke; New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016. 61-91. 
  • Wright, Carrie. “Mrs. Elton’s Pearls: Simulating Superiority in Jane Austen’s Emma.” Persuasions On-Line 37.1 (2016). Web. 
  • Wright, Erika. “Jane Austen’s Plots of Prevention.” Reading for Health: Medical Narratives and the Nineteenth-Century Novel. Athens: Ohio UP, 2016. 23-54. 
  • Yock, Malvina. “Three Young Men: James Morland.” Sensibilities 52 (2016): 63-69. 
  • Yoder, Sherida. “Mrs. Bennett.” Paterson Literary Review 44 (2016): 363. A poem in defense of Mrs. Bennett [sic]. 
  • Zaman, Mira Sengupta. “‘Your Reasonings Carry My Judgment’: Deception, Mischief, and Satanic Persuasion in Austen’s Emma.” ANQ: A Quarterly Journal of Short Articles, Notes and Reviews 29.2 (2016): 67-71. 
  • Zanin, Andrea. “Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Regency, Repression, and Roundhouse Kicks.” Marinucci 201-18.
  • Zionkowski, Linda. “‘Small, Trifling Presents’: Giving and Receiving in Emma.” Persuasions On-Line 37.1 (2016). Web. 
  • _____. Women and Gift Exchange in Eighteenth-Century Fiction: Richardson, Burney, Austen. New York: Routledge, 2016. See especially ch. 5 “Transforming the Gift in Mansfield Park,” and ch. 6 on “Trifling Presents in Emma.”

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4. Selected Dissertations

  • Abdulhaq, Hala M. “Representations of Women’s Oppressions in Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, and Emma.” MA thesis. Clark Atlanta U, 2016. Web. http://digitalcommons.auctr.edu/cauetds/55/
  • Acosta, Hanely. “Jane Austen and Fan Sequels: The Potential for Fan Activity to Extend the Critical Dialogue.” MA thesis. Western Connecticut State U, 2016. 
  • Acosta Rodríguez, Keyla Ariane. “Love in the Afternoon: The Nineteenth Century Canonical Romance Novel and Reader Response Theory: Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre,and Thomas Hardy’s Tess of the D’Ubervilles.” MA thesis. Universidad de Puerto Rico, 2016.
  • Alicandro, Erin E. “The Power of Gossip in Jane Austen’s Novels.” MA thesis. Central Connecticut State U, 2016. Web. http://cdm16627.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/ccsutheses/id/2378
  • Bagno-Simon, Libby. “Absent Mothers, Guiding Sisters and Proper Ladies: Familial Female Dynamics in Jane Austen’s Novels.” Diss. U of Haifa, 2016. 
  • Belkhatir, Sarra. “A Comparative Study of the Position of Women in Europe throughout Daisy Miller and Pride and Prejudice.” MA thesis. U of Tlemcen (Algeria), 2016. Web. http://dspace.univ-tlemcen.dz/handle/112/9028
  • Bereit, Richard Martin. “Reading’s Effect: A Novel Perspective.” Diss. U of Utah, 2016. DAI-A 78/02(E) (2016); ProQuest (2016): item 10158626. Web. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1824066442
  • Bloom, Amanda Charlotte. “Suppositional Thinking in Eighteenth-Century Literature: Authorship, Originality, and the Female Imagination.” Diss. U of Southern California Los Angeles, 2016. Web. Discusses Samuel Richardson and his influence on the writings of Sarah Fielding, Mary Hays, and Jane Austen. http://cdm15799.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15799coll40/id/301020
  • Brown, Jessica. “The Transforming Heroine: Becoming a Wife in a[n] Austen Marriage Plot.” MA thesis. DePaul U, 2016. Web. http://via.library.depaul.edu/etd/208
  • Bruusgaard, Emily. “Disruptive Threads and Renegade Yarns: Domestic Textile Making in Selected Women’s Writing 1811-1925.” Diss. Queen’s U (Canada), 2016. DAI-C 75/01 (2016); ProQuest (2016): item 1058776. Web. The second chapter examines the role of embroidery in the construction of “appropriate” feminine gentility in Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1884625534
  • Chang, Lidia A. “Cultural Subtexts and Social Functions of Domestic Music-Making in Jane Austen’s England.” MA thesis. U of Massachusetts Amherst, 2016. Web. http://scholarworks.umass.edu/masters_theses_2/340/
  • Clark, Kaitlyn Elaine. “Anorexic Austen: Issues of Appetite and Self-Starvation in Mansfield Park.” MA thesis. California State U, 2016. MAI 56/02M(E); ProQuest (2016): item 10245909. Web. Abstract only. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1859912154
  • Crisp, Mollie. “Satire and Sympathy in the Nineteenth-Century Realist Novel: Austen, Thackeray, Dickens, and Eliot.” Diss. Catholic U of America, 2016. DAI-A 77/10(E) (2016); ProQuest (2016): item 10117604. Web. Abstract only. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1795084459
  • Cronin, Madeline. “The Politics of Taste: Mary Wollstonecraft and Jane Austen on the Cultivation of Democratic Judgment.” Diss. U of Notre Dame, 2016. Web. https://curate.nd.edu/show/f1881j94q5f
  • Cusick, Colleen. “Playing with Matches: Matchmaking as Authorship in the Nineteenth-Century Marriage Plot.” Diss. City U of New York, 2016. DAI-A 77/09(E); ProQuest (2016): item 10105435. Web. Abstract only. Ch. 1 evaluates Emma, Jane Austen’s great novel of matchmaking. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1787563865
  • Fesi, Joshua Israel. “Enlightenment Phenomenology: The Focalization of Perceptual Experience in Eighteenth-Century Urban Narrative.” Diss. Rutgers, the State U of New Jersey–New Brunswick, 2016. DAI-A 78/07(E) (2016); ProQuest (2016): item 10479354.Web. Abstract only. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1877967158
  • Fisher, Dalene. “Marriage and Paradoxical Christian Agency in the Novels of Mary Wollstonecraft, Jane Austen, Anne Brontë, and Elizabeth Gaskell.” Diss. U of Kent at Canterbury (UK), 2016. DAI-C 74/12; ProQuest (2016): item 10298580. Web. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1864776380
  • Fournier, Alexandra. “‘My Name Is Lizzie Bennet’; Successfully Adapting Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice (1813) for the Twenty-First Century with The Lizzie Bennet Diaries (2012-2013).” MA thesis. U of Waterloo (Ontario), 2016. Web. https://uwspace.uwaterloo.ca/handle/10012/10440
  • George, Leigh-Michil. “Sentiment and Laughter: Caricature in the Novel, 1740-1840.” Diss. U of California, Los Angeles, 2016. DAI-A 78/03(E) (2016); ProQuest (2016): item 10158437. Web. Abstract only. The third chapter is an exploration of Jane Austen’s Persuasion (1818). https://search.proquest.com/docview/1838257801
  • Grunert, Elisabeth M. “Enterprising Women in Novels of Manners: The Social Economies of Austen, Thackeray, and Wharton.” MA thesis. Virginia Tech, 2016. Web. Discusses Austen’s Mansfield Park, Thackeray’s Vanity Fair, and Wharton’s The House of Mirth. https://vtechworks.lib.vt.edu/handle/10919/73540
  • Hegele, Arden A. “Reading Autopsy: The Medical Practice of Romantic Literature.” Diss. Columbia U, 2016. DAI-A 77/12(E) (2016); ProQuest (2016): item 10134139. Web. Abstract only. Discusses Austen, Wollstonecraft, Keats, Shelley, Wordsworth, and Tennyson. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1810430169
  • Jacobs, Corrie Lynn. “From Miss Delia Dainty to Diana Parker: Bodily Spinster Stereotypes in Jane Austen’s Works.” MA thesis. U of Texas at Austin, 2016. Web. https://repositories.lib.utexas.edu/handle/2152/43749
  • Jaworski, Cheryl Lynn. “Etchings on the Self: Neuropsychoanalysis and the Scene of Reading, from Austen to Woolf.” Diss. U of California, Santa Barbara, 2016. DAI-A 78/07(E) (2016); ProQuest (2016): item 10194640. Web. Abstract only. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1876895389
  • Lim, Jane. “Imaginary Translators: The Boundaries of the English Novel, 1763-1818.” Diss. U of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2016. DAI-A 78/02(E) (2016); ProQuest (2016): item 10145932. Web. Abstract only. Discusses the works of Horace Walpole, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, Elizabeth Marsh, and Jane Austen. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1828256014
  • Loftis, Madison L. “Social Realism in the Portrayals of Clergymen in Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, Mansfield Park, and Emma.” MA thesis. Tennessee Technological U, 2016. MAI 56/02M(E) (2016); ProQuest (2016): item 102241560. Web. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1868414836.
  • McKenzie, Kristal. “‘I Always Cure You when I Come’: The Caregiver Figure in the Novels of Jane Austen.” MA thesis. Wake Forest U, 2016. MAI 55/05M(E) (2016); ProQuest (2016): item 10116377. Web. Abstract only. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1802828007
  • McMillen, Krystal. “The Edible Eighteenth Century: Eating, Dining, and Digesting in Literature from Defoe to Austen.” Diss. U of Colorado at Boulder, 2016. DAI-A 77/10(E) (2016); ProQuest (2016): item 10108727. Web. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1793670690
  • Mennessier, Camille. “To What Extent Does Jane Austen Defend the Values of ‘Feminism’ in Pride and Prejudice?” MA thesis. Université de Caen, 2016. Web. English text. http://www.sudoc.fr/201295989
  • Morris, James Medley. “Beyond Orientalism: ‘The Stranger’ and ‘Colonial Cosmopolitanism’ in the Romantic Period Novel.” Diss. U of Glasgow, 2016. DAI-C 74/12  (2016); ProQuest (2016): item10302799. Web. Discusses Jane Austen, John Thelwall, Walter Scott, Amelia Opie, Maria Edgeworth, Elizabeth Hamilton, Lady Morgan, Phoebe Gibbes, and John Galt. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1857762842
  • Orendain, Emmabel. “Pride and Prejudice and Perception of Distance: How Transmedia Affects Audience Roles in the Lizzie Bennet Diaries.” MA thesis. Chapman U, 2016. 
  • Perry, Melanie G. “Beautiful Little Fools: Class, Gender, and Conformity in the Pre-Feminist Marriage Narrative.” MA thesis. Central Connecticut State U, 2016. Web. Discusses Elizabeth Bennet, Mrs. Bennet, and Charlotte Lucas. http://content.library.ccsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/ccsutheses/id/2332.
  • Rampelli, Melissa. “The Form of Fits: Proto-Feminism in the British Realist Novel, 1798-1887.” St. John’s U (New York), 2016. DAI-A 77/11(E) (2016); ProQuest (2016): item 10139824. Web. Abstract only. Discusses the realist novels of Jane Austen, Charles Dickens, George Eliot, and Thomas Hardy. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1805324170
  • Reese, Stephanie. “Jane Austen from Page to Screen: How Current Society and Pride and Prejudice Have Shaped Northanger Abbey, Persuasion, and Mansfield Park on Film.” MA thesis. State U of New York at Stony Brook, 2016. MAI 55/03M(E) (2016); ProQuest (2016): item 10013314.Web. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1766580304
  • Robbins, Shaina Gwynn. “Faithful to the Fans: Audience Influence on The Lizzie Bennet Diaries and Transmedia Adaptation Fidelity.” MA thesis. Brigham Young U, 2016. Web. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/5823/
  • Schnebelen, Jessica. “Literature as Virtual Reality: An Exploration of Subjectivity Formation in the Digital Era.” MA thesis. U of Arkansas, 2016. MAI 55/04M(E) (2016); ProQuest (2016): item 10107103. Web. This project looks at the work of Jane Austen, Virginia Woolf, and a contemporary television writer, Charlie Brooker. http://scholarworks.uark.edu/etd/1501/
  • Schubert, Tiffany Elaine. “A History of Happy Love: Happy Endings in Medieval Romance and the Novel.” Diss. U of Dallas, 2016. Schubert selects four figures of chivalric romances for discussion: Sir Orfeo, Havelok the Dane, Emaré, and Emma. See ch. 7 “Chivalric Eucatastrophe in Emma.” 
  • Smothers, Amanda. “Jane Austen Uncensored: A Critical and Pedagogical Study of Austen’s Letters for the College Classroom.” Diss. Northern Illinois U, 2016. DAI-A 77/10(E) (2016); ProQuest (2016): item 10123567. Web. Abstract only. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1795565845
  • Sullivan, Kathleen Marion. “The Function of Letters in Nineteenth-Century Realist Novels: Epistolarity and Character in Austen, Thackeray, Dickens, and Gaskell.” Diss. Catholic U of America, 2016. DAI-A 77/10(E) (2016); ProQuest (2016): item 10117618. Web. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1795086777
  • Sun, Shuo. The Reception of Jane Austen in China. Diss. U of Nottingham, 2016. Web. http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/38499/.
  • Surface, Samara. “‘Its Own Sense of Verisimilitude’: The Lizzie Bennet Diaries as a Transhistorical Adaptation of the Semipublic.” MA thesis. Oregon State U, 2016. Web. https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/graduate_thesis_or_dissertations/8336h4354?locale=en
  • Turner, Joanna Leigh. “Cordial Treatments: The Medical Plot in Novels by Jane Austen and the Brontës.” Diss. U of Texas at Austin, 2016. Web. https://repositories.lib.utexas.edu/handle/2152/39252
  • Van Damme, Virginie. “A Comparative Analysis of the Gothic Heritage in Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey and Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein.” MA thesis. Université de Perpignan, 2016. 
  • Vance, Mary. “A Natural History of Teasing: British Women Writers and the Shakespearean Courtship Narrative, 1677-1818.” Diss. U of Nevada, Las Vegas, 2016. DAI-A 78/05(E) (2016); ProQuest (2016): item 10180032. Web. Abstract only. Draws on select works from the following authors: Aphra Behn, Mary Davys, Susannah Centlivre, Charlotte Lennox, Eliza Haywood, Frances Sheridan, Joanna Baillie, Hannah Cowley, Elizabeth Inchbald, and Jane Austen. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1850631931
  • Vincent, Tonja S. “From Epistolary Form to Embedded Narratological Device: Embedded Epistles in Austen and Scott.” MA thesis. Brigham Young U, 2016. Web. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/6444/
  • Weir, Colleen Kathryn. “Memory and Action in the Nineteenth-Century Realist Novel: Jane Austen, Anne Brontë, and George Eliot.” Diss. Catholic U of America, 2016. DAI-A 77/10(E) (2016); ProQuest (2016): item 10117653. Web. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1795084236.
  • Yu, Tong. “The Anglo-Scottish Union and British National Identity in Women’s Writing, 1780-1820.” Diss. Arizona State U, 2016. DAI-A 77/09(E) (2016); ProQuest (2016): item 10107530. Discusses Jane Austen, Cassandra Cooke, Dorothy Wordsworth, Mary Brunton, and Susan Ferrier. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1791390527.

break graphic5. Popular Culture

  • Adams, Elizabeth. Unwilling: A Pride and Prejudice Vagary. [Author], 2016.
  • Austen in Austin, Vol. 1. Cumberland, MD: WhiteFire, 2016. Four Texas-style historical novellas based on Austen’s novels Emma, Pride and Prejudice, Northanger Abbey, and Sense and Sensibility; stories by Gina Welborn, Anita Mae Draper, Susanne Dietze, and Debra E. Marvin. 
  • Austen in Austin, Vol. 2. Cumberland, MD: WhiteFire, 2016. Four Texas-style historical novellas based on Austen’s novels Lady Susan, Persuasion, Mansfield Park, and Sense and Sensibility; stories by Suzie Johnson, Niki Turner, Dina L. Sleiman, and Lisa Karon Richardson. 
  • Barron, Stephanie. Jane and the Waterloo Map. New York: Soho, 2016. A Jane Austen Mystery. 
  • Bebris, Carrie. North by Northanger, or, The Shades of Pemberley. 2006. Harpenden, UK: Crime Mystery, 2016. Mr. and Mrs. Darcy Mysteries.
  • Berdoll, Linda. The Darcys: New Pleasures; Pride and Prejudice Continues. Austin, TX: Well There It Is, 2016. 
  • Bright, Ada, and Cass Grafton. The Particular Charm of Miss Jane Austen. Bath, UK: Brown Dog Books, 2016. 
  • Carolino, Joey. The Jane Austen Kama Sutra: A Playful Presentation of Sense and Sensuality. Kennebunkport, ME: Cider Mill, 2016. 
  • Carroll, Chellie, illus. Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice: A Coloring Classic. New York: Doubleday; UK: Little Tiger, 2016. The UK title is spelled “Colouring.” 
  • A Certain Persuasion: Modern LGBTQ+ Fiction Inspired by Jane Austen’s Novels. [N.p.]: Manifold, 2016. An anthology of thirteen stories by eleven authors.
  • Colour My Classics: Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. Royston, UK: Worth, 2016. 
  • Colour My Classics: Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility. Royston, UK: Worth, 2016. 
  • Craven, Ashlinn. Building Mr. Darcy. [Author]: Crimson Romance, 2016. 
  • Crow, Donna Fletcher. A Most Singular Venture: Murder in Jane Austen’s London. Boise, ID: Verity, 2016. Elizabeth and Richard Mysteries Bk. 4. 
  • Ellsworth, Jeanna. Hope for Fitzwilliam. [Author]: Hey Lady, 2016. A Pride and Prejudice variation, Hope Series Trilogy Bk. 2.
  • _____. Hope for Mr. Darcy. [Author]: Hey Lady, 2016. A Pride and Prejudice variation, Hope Series Trilogy Bk. 1. 
  • Fairview, Monica. Mr. Darcy’s Pride and Joy. [Author]: White Soup, 2016. Darcy Novels Bk. 3. 
  • Farrant, Natasha. Lydia: The Wild Girl of Pride and Prejudice. Frome, UK: Chicken House, 2016.
  • _____. The Secret Diary of Lydia Bennet. New York: Chicken House/Scholastic, 2016. Also published in the UK in 2016 under the title Lydia: The Wild Girl of Pride and Prejudice
  • Frankel, Valerie Estelle. Nonsensibility or Finding Love, Freindship, Pride, Sensibility, Persuasion, Dilemma, and Creative Spelling in Mansfield Abbey: A Comical Mash-up of the Classic Jane Austen Novels. [N.p.]: Lit Crit, 2016. 
  • Grace, Maria. Pemberley: Mr. Darcy’s Dragon. Kingwood, TX: White Soup, 2016. Jane Austen’s Dragons Bk. 1. 
  • Hamilton, Eva Maria. Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility Colouring and Activity Book, Featuring Illustrations from 1896. [Author]: Lilac Lane, 2016.
  • Hart, Staci. Wasted Words. [Author], 2016. Inspired by Jane Austen’s Emma
  • Heald, Henrietta. Jane Austen: Amazing and Extraordinary Facts. Hassocks [UK]: Rydon, 2016. 
  • Hemingway, Collins. The Marriage of Miss Jane Austen: A Novel by a Gentleman. Vol. II. [Author], 2016. 
  • Hile, Laura. L. Darcy by Any Other Name. Beaverton, OR: [Author], 2016. 
  • Holmstrom, Engin Inel. House of Daughters: A Romance Set in 1920s Ottoman Turkey Inspired by Pride and Prejudice. Bloomington, IN: Archway, 2016. 
  • Hyde, Katherine Bolger. Arsenic with Austen: A Crime with the Classics Mystery. New York: Minotaur, 2016. 
  • James, Jenetta. The Elizabeth Papers. Oysterville, WA: Meryton, 2016. A tale of 21st-century descendants of Elizabeth and Fitzwilliam Darcy.
  • Jane Austen Coloring Book. Richmond Hill, ON: UDON, 2016. Manga Classics, with scenes from Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice and Emma by various artists. 
  • Jane Austen Notebook. [N.p.]: Cider Mill, 2016. A blank notebook with inspirational quotes from Jane Austen’s works and letters. 
  • Jane Austen Notes and Quotes. London: Michael O’Mara, 2016. Notebook with witty and insightful quotes from Jane Austen’s works and letters.
  • Kincaid, Victoria. Darcy vs. Bennet: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. [Author], 2016. 
  • King, J. Dawn. The Abominable Mr. Darcy: A Pride and Prejudice Variation. [Author]: Quiet Mountain, 2016. 
  • Kramer, Kyra C. Mansfield Parsonage. [Author]: MadeGlobal, 2016. Mary Crawford’s story. 
  • Lee, Tony, adapt. Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: The Graphic Novel. By Seth Grahame-Smith and Jane Austen. Illus. Cliff Richards. London: Titan Books, 2016. 
  • Lacey, Saskia. The Prehistoric Masters of Literature. Illus. Sernur Isik. Lake Forest, CA: Walter Foster, 2016. Jurassic Classics. Covers works by Shakespeare, the Brontës, Edgar Allan Poe, Mark Twain, Charles Dickens, and Jane Austen. Children’s book. 
  • Larsen, Brittany. Pride and Politics. American Fork, UT: Covenant, 2016. A modern day retelling of Pride and Prejudice
  • MacColl, Michaela. Secrets in the Snow: A Novel of Intrigue and Romance. San Francisco: Chronicle, 2016. YA novel, about Jane Austen and Tom Lefroy.
  • McGowan, Ronald. To Make Sport for Our Neighbours: Being Extracts From the Commonplace Books of Francis Bennet, Esq. of Longbourn, in Hertfordshire. [Author], 2016. Sequel to Pride and Prejudice.
  • Oakley, Jacqui, illus. Color Me Jane: A Jane Austen Coloring Book. New York: Clarkson Potter, 2016. 
  • Oaks, Diana J. Constant as the Sun: The Courtship of Mr. Darcy. [Author]: CreateSpace, 2016. 
  • Oliver, Katie. The Trouble with Emma. [UK]: Carina, 2016. Jane Austen Factor, Bk. 2. Kindle Ebook. 
  • _____. What Would Lizzy Bennet Do? [UK]: Carina, 2016. Jane Austen Factor, Bk. 1. Kindle Ebook. 
  • _____. Who Needs Mr. Willoughby? [UK]: Carina, 2016. Jane Austen Factor, Bk. 3. Kindle Ebook. 
  • O’Neill, Cecily. Young Jane: Three Plays Inspired by Jane Austen’s Juvenilia. Winchester, UK: 2TimeTheatre, 2016.
  • Pimentel, Melissa. The One That Got Away. London: Penguin, 2016. A modern retelling of Persuasion
  • Price, Sarah. Mount Hope: An Amish Retelling of Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park. Lake Mary, FL: Realms, 2016. Amish Classics.
  • Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. Adapted screenplay by Burr Steers from the book by Seth Grahame-Smith and Jane Austen. Dir. Burr Steers. Perf. Lily James, Sam Riley, Bella Heathcote, Matt Smith, Jack Huston, Douglas Booth, Charles Dance, and Lena Headey. Sony, 2016. Film, DVD. 
  • Rundles, Anita, illus. Classic Coloring: Jane Austen: 55 Removable Coloring Plates. New York: Abrams Noterie, 2016. 
  • Schroeder, Anngela. A Lie Universally Hidden. [Author], 2016. A Pride and Prejudice variation. 
  • Sittenfeld, Curtis. Eligible: A Modern Retelling of Pride and Prejudice. New York: Random, 2016. 
  • Smith, Rebecca. The Jane Austen Writers’ Club: Inspiration and Advice from the World’s Best-Loved Novelist. New York: Bloomsbury, 2016. 
  • Starnes, Joana. Mr. Bennet’s Dutiful Daughter. [Author], 2016. A Pride and Prejudice variation. 
  • Stevens, Elizabeth. Netherfield Prep: A Modern Reimagining of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. [Author]: Sleeping Dragon, 2016. 
  • Stillman, Whit. Love and Friendship, in Which Jane Austen’s Lady Susan Vernon Is Entirely Vindicated. London: Two Roads, 2016. 
  • Todd, Janet. Lady Susan Plays the Game. London: Bloomsbury, 2016, c2013. 
  • Tyla, Camme, narr. Wisdom of Jane Austen. [N.p.]: Brilliance Audio 2016. Audio CD. 
  • Vogler, Pen. Tea with Jane Austen: Recipes Inspired by Her Novels and Letters. London: CICO, 2016. 
  • Wang, Jack, and Holman Wang. Jane Austen’s Emma. 2013. San Francisco: Chronicle, 2016. Cozy Classics. 
  • _____. Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. 2012. San Francisco: Chronicle, 2016. Cozy Classics. 
  • Webb, Brenda J. Passages: A Pemberley Tale. [Author]: CreateSpace, 2016. A Pride and Prejudice variation.
  • Widdowson, Daniel, adapt. Pride and Prejudice. By Jane Austen. Fremantle, Austral.: Vivid, 2016. An adaptation of Austen’s novel for the Australian stage.
  • Wilde, Darcie. A Useful Woman. New York: Berkley Crime, 2016. Rosalind Thorne Mystery Bk.1. Set in 19th-century London, the first in a new mystery series inspired by the novels of Jane Austen.
  • Williams, J. A. Within Our Gates. [N.p.], UK: Troubador, 2016. Inspired by Persuasion, set in 1900s Brooklyn.

 

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.  At this point, Editor Susan Allen Ford and I 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.  I 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.  As there are a number of works that are self-published in this area, I have listed those that are readily available for purchase that show a title and copyright page and an ISBN number and are catalogued on WorldCat.  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. 

I welcome any comments, suggestions, additions, or corrections.  Please email me at books@bygonebooksvermont.com or jasnavermont@gmail.com.

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