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Jane Austen's Emma: In the Heart of Highbury (Lecture on Ch. 1-26)

'To be sure — our discordancies must always arise from my being in the wrong.'

Today we are indulging in a little bit of Regency gossip as we settle into the world of Highbury in Jane Austen's Emma.

We're discussing irony, subtext, misperception, matrimony, social class, courtship, friendship, true love, what makes a great character, relationship dynamics, comic juxtaposition, psychological complexity, men and women, solipsism, maturation, and much more.

Timestamps:

0:00 welcome to the heart of Highbury

2:00 polarising criticism of this novel

4:00 reading the first reviews of Emma

6:00 irony, subtext & compression

8:00 appreciating the voices of Emma

10:00 Jane Austen in Miss Woodhouse

12:00 appreciating the beginning together

14:00 drama arises from misperception

16:00 ‘matrimony as the origin of change’

18:00 on marriage in Regency England

20:00 positive traits of Emma Woodhouse

22:00 understanding others by our wishes

24:00 the history of the Woodhouse family

26:00 Emma’s relationship with Knightley

28:00 the expert matchmaking of Emma

30:00 class tension in Georgian society

32:00 the class background of Jane Austen

34:00 family background of Mr Weston

36:00 better to choose than be chosen?

38:00 the background of Frank Churchill

40:00 Austen’s web of social relations

42:00 Emma’s friendship with Harriet

44:00 Austen’s exploration of solipsism

46:00 on the absurdity of self-centredness

48:00 Harriet & Mr Elton vs Mr Martin

50:00 seeing your wishes vs actual reality

52:00 mark of true vs false friendship

54:00 Knightley on what Emma needs

57:00 who does Mr Elton really like?

59:00 Emma as the director of rejection

1:02:00 motif of guidance in the novel

1:04:00 Emma & Knightley argue again

1:06:00 the clash of men vs women

1:08:00 Knightley doing the real service

1:11:00 respect in love & friendship

1:13:00 projecting our thoughts on others

1:15:00 wisdom & ironic blindness

1:16:00 one thing single people always hear

1:18:00 Emma’s anti-marital discourse

1:20:00 realism & minutiae of daily life

1:22:00 Samuel Richardson vs Henry Fielding

1:24:00 Jane’s preoccupation with sickness

1:26:00 can men & women just be friends?

1:27:00 Emma thinks of Frank Churchill

1:29:00 inability to judge another’s situation

1:30:00 Mr Elton professes his love for Emma

1:32:00 perspective is what changes character

1:34:00 does Emma have self-awareness?

1:36:00 a classic Emma-Knightley debate

1:38:00 Mr Knightley on Frank Churchill

1:40:00 family history of Jane Fairfax

1:42:00 the jealousy of Emma Woodhouse

1:44:00 finally meeting Frank Churchill

1:46:00 Jane Fairfax receives a piano

1:48:00 ‘Mr Knightley must not marry’

1:50:00 what are you making of Emma?

Recommended Resources:

Reading Assignment:

Our next discussion will cover up to and including volume three, chapter nineteen, which runs to page 453 in the Penguin paperback edition and takes us to the climax of Jane Austen's delightful novel.

Questions for You:

1) Why do you think Emma divides so many readers?

2) Do you recognise any of Jane Austen's characters from your life?

3) What is the most important thing in a romantic partner? 

4) Have you ever tried to play matchmaker like Emma?

If this is your first reading of Emma, I would love to know how the story is meeting your expectations. 

If this is a reread for you, what is it like returning to the story? And please do share with us your favourite passages, ideas, and characters from the events of the novel so far.

Happy reading, everybody!

Jane Austen's Emma: In the Heart of Highbury (Lecture on Ch. 1-26)

Comments

Emma is good so far. First time read. Persuasion is still my fave Austen novel and Pride and Prejudice is my 2nd. This would be my 3rd but still not bad. While persuasion is a more adult love story this is an adolescent one. But that’s ok, we were all kids once.

Michael Dundrea

It is such a joy to return to Emma and get lost in the society of Highbury again. Pure entertainment. Jane Austen's humour and wit is like no other. I love the 2020 movie adaption with its stunning visuals and excellent cast (Miranda Hart as Miss Bates). Looking forward to reading the back half of the novel.

Daisy

Can't stand Knightly's view of the role of a wife as a submissive companion. Emma reminds me of Darcy. She is young but as a person running an estate a large number of people depend on her and she does her best. Visits the poor with baskets and sends meat to the Bates.

Judith klinghoffer

I chose to read Bleak House before Emma, since my November calendar was less cramped. I'm now 2/3 through Emma and only beginning to enjoy it a little. I don’t hate Emma; she’s a young person who is full of herself, as most young people are. For me, she is redeemed by her self-examination and slow maturation. I don’t adore her, but neither do I despise her as some do. What I despise is the world she lives in. I don’t remember feeling this way when reading Pride and Prejudice, or Sense and Sensibility. Surely their worlds were similarly small. I’m not sure why Highbury is particularly distasteful to me. Maybe the relentless conversations about NOTHING remind me of the small mid-western town I couldn’t wait to flee. Interests are limited; personalities and appearances are all that people discuss. My grandmother was constantly “picking fruit,” an activity which she derived from the words of Christ (“You will know them by their fruits”) which meaning Christ surely didn’t intend. “I’m not judging,” she’d say, “I’m only picking fruit.” No one in Highbury speaks of ideas or concepts or scarcely even of books. I will concede that Austin is genius at portraying an entire world via dialogue. However, I would not like to live in that world. Even Mr. Knightly, who is supposedly the soul of reason and gentlemanliness, says little that isn’t a judgment – of Emma, of Jane Fairfax, of Mrs. Elton. And Miss Bates! God spare me from Miss Bates. There are too many of those in my life to be subjected to them in literature, especially sandwiched between other inane conversations. No relief!

Shelley Riden

I loved when you said this ends without ostentation — it made me think “without Austentation”. Perhaps there is meaning in our author’s last name as if she herself were one of her characters.

Peter Blasevick

Thanks Ben - I am loving Emma although it took a little bit to get into the story. I think with Pride and Prejudice you are hooked from the start. I love Austen's observations and the different characters which are as relevant today. We all know someone like Mr Woodhouse obsessing about health and weather, or a Mr John Knightly getting irritable with his father-in-law. A Miss Bates who talks endlessly. Austen must have had a lot of fun observing different people and writing about them.

Helen Lyons

I think that books are personal and liking or not liking a book is such a personal viewpoint. I love this about this book club. I’ve just joined and have been reading comments and feel this amazing vibe of the interactions here. Bravo HCLB.

Canadian Darlene

I completely agree. I feel a connection to Emma even though we are very different. I do like the banter between the characters, the natter as Benjamin says. And I feel that Emma is self centred but not malicious. Now I will have to read further to know if this opinion remains..

Canadian Darlene

It’s been many years since I’ve read Jane Austen and that was only one of her novels. At least that’s what i remember. It’s been recent months and I think I have read every Georgette Heyer book. I am an obsessed fan of Heyer. I’ll be hanging on at the end on this session but I have a feeling I will appreciate it being better late than never.

SusanG

It might be an unpopular opinion, but Emma has always been one of my favorite books. I really loved Mr. Knightly, and I enjoyed their banter. I found this book to be much more humor-based than serious, like a great romantic love story. I always classed this as a romantic comedy of sorts. I found Emma to have a pretty good character arc, and as we all learn through mistakes. I have tried to play matchmaker, as do many of my siblings, which can go well or poorly. Most of the time, we are wrong, not unlike Emma and her choice for Harriett. I can see that Emma's childishness puts others off, but I don't think she is malicious; she just lacks experience, which isn't necessarily her fault, given the era and her family dynamic.

Alexis VonTrapp

Emma isn't my favorite book of Austen, but I am really enjoying this 2nd read, and finding myself laughing quite frequently.

Karen Bird

I am the one who doesn’t like the book. I do like the craft. But overall - gossipy it is, and the gossip is slow and savored - when you guess what happens in the chapter quite soon, and then the chapter just goes and goes about it in most flowery and witty way…. But - I do like Emma so far, her strength, competitiveness, adherence to her views, both her maturity and immaturity. Or maybe I just don’t like “social victims”- so I refuse to blame all their troubles on her:) And, as always, Ben - you make it magic, without anticipation of your take on this book I would likely have given it up quite soon.

Svetlana Monroe


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