'I am never too busy to think of S&S. I can no more forget it, than a mother can forget her suckling child' (Jane Austen to her sister Cassandra, 25 April 1811).
This course explores Jane Austen's first published novel, Sense and Sensibility (1811). Contextualising the novel by considering Austen's life and her Georgian times, the course also closely analyses Austen's masterful writing style and her use of literary techniques.
We will examine in detail central elements of Sense and Sensibility, including topics such as economics, inheritance, the legal and cultural status of women, Austen's narrative style and techniques (e.g. free indirect discourse, focalisation, perspective, irony), the meaning of the terms 'sense' and 'sensibility' in the late eighteenth century, and the satirising of novelistic norms.
The course includes a guided trip to Hampshire, where we will visit key sites in Austen’s life: Steventon (where she was born and first began to write), Chawton (where she published all her novels), and Winchester (where she died and is buried).
The course also includes a trip to the Bodleian Library archives to see Austen material and manuscripts housed there.
This course is part of the Oxford University Summer School for Adults (OUSSA) programme.