2023-2024 Meetings


These meetings were held between the fall of 2023 and the spring of 2024.





Sunday, September 10, 2023

2 pm, Charles River Museum of Industry and Innovation

and also on Zoom.



Pamela Bromberg

Charlotte Smith: Poet, Novelist, Radical

This talk offers an introduction to Charlotte Smith's life and works, both her poetry and her fiction, including Emmeline (1788), Celestina (1791), Desmond (1792), and The Old Manor House (1793), with comparisons to Austen's novels. Smith (1749–1806) began her prolific career as a very successful poet with the publication in 1784 of Elegiac Sonnets, to wide acclaim.

Though she was born into a prosperous country gentry family, the pressures of a disastrous marriage and financial ruin contributed to Smith's transformation into a political radical. During their lifetimes, Smith was far better known and more successful as a writer than Austen was. We know from her Juvenilia that a teen-age Jane Austen found Smith's Emmeline delightful, as attendees will no doubt find this presentation.

Simmons University Professor Emerita Pam Bromberg began her academic career as a Blake scholar and has migrated over the years to teaching and scholarly work on a broad variety of writers, including Jane Austen, Virginia Woolf and Henry Fielding, as well as contemporary women and post-colonial novelists, among them Margaret Drabble, Margaret Atwood, Lillian Hellman, and Nigerian writer Buchi Emecheta.

She has contributed essays on teaching Austen's Pride and Prejudice, Emma and Mansfield Park to the MLA's Approaches to Teaching volumes.





Sunday, October 22, 2023

2 pm, Charles River Museum of Industry and Innovation



Carole Thompson

Cast out and Taken In - Exploring Despair and Disparity
in Jane Austen's Sense and Sensibility
and in the Present Day

In her novels, Jane Austen has encouraged us to believe pride and prejudice (and sense and sensibility) are intricately intertwined. I suggest that despair and disparity are equally related, particularly in Sense and Sensibility. This presentation will focus on how disparity, based on exclusionary societal constructs which protect financial security, social position, and power for a privileged few (while marginalizing others within society) leads to despair.

Carole Thompson is a past Nova Scotia Regional Secretary and member, Planning and Bylaws committees, and is JASNA Canada Nominating Committee Chair. She has presented workshops and lectures to regional and international audiences on "The Importance of Having Lavender for Jane Austen's Characters, Family Members, and Modern-day Fans" "200 Years Later: Reliving the Regency Ball" and "Cast Out and Taken In: Exploring Despair and Disparity in Sense and Sensibility and in the Present Day."



Sunday, December 3, 2023

on Zoom only





Inger S. B. Brodey


Hastening together to perfect felicity,

or

How Happy are Jane Austen's Endings Anyway?


Inger S. B. Brodey is an award-winning professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where she teaches Global Jane Austen among other courses. She's the founder and director of the annual Jane Austen Summer Program JaneAustenSummer.org and co-host of the Jane Austen and Co. web series (jaandco.org).

As far as her JASNA involvement, she has served on the board of directors of JASNA, twice been a traveling lecturer, and twice been the JASNA North American Scholar lecturer at an AGM. In June 2024, she has a book coming out from Johns Hopkins University Press called Jane Austen and the Price of Happiness. You can read more about her at www.ingerbrodey.com



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