
Description
The Church of England was at the heart of Jane Austen's world of elegance and upheaval. Fashionable Goodness: Christianity in Jane Austen's England explores the church's role in her life and novels, the challenges that church faced, and how it changed the world. In one volume, this book brings together resources from many sources to show the church at a pivotal time in history, when English Christians were freeing enslaved people, empowering the poor and oppressed, and challenging society's moral values and immoral behavior.
Readers will meet Anglicans, Dissenters, Evangelicals, women leaders, poets, social reformers, hymn writers, country parsons, authors, and more. Lovers of Jane Austen or of church history and the long eighteenth century will enjoy discovering all this and much more:
- Why could Mr. Collins, a rector, afford to marry a poor woman, while Mr. Elton, a vicar, and Charles Hayter, a curate, could not?
- Why did Mansfield Park's early readers (unlike most today) love Fanny Price?
- What part did people of color, like Miss Lambe of Sanditon, play in English society?
- Why did Elizabeth Bennet compliment her kind sister Jane on her "candour"?
- What shirked religious duties caused Anne Elliot to question the integrity of her cousin William Elliot?
- Which Austen characters exhibited "true honor," "false honor," or "no honor"?
- How did William Wilberforce, Hannah More, and William Cowper (beloved poet of Marianne Dashwood and Jane Austen) bring "goodness" into fashion?
- How did the French Revolution challenge England's complacency and draw the upper classes back to church?
- How did Christians campaigning to abolish the slave trade pioneer modern methods of working for social causes?
Explore the church of Jane Austen's world in Fashionable Goodness: Christianity in Jane Austen's England.
Product Details
Publisher | Topaz Cross Books |
Publish Date | September 05, 2022 |
Pages | 402 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9798986601601 |
Dimensions | 9.2 X 6.1 X 0.8 inches | 1.2 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"Finally! Fashionable Goodness: Christianity in Jane Austen's England is the Jane Austen reference book that's been missing from the bookshelves of every Austen fan and scholar. I can't wait to add this to my research collection and keep it at my fingertips whenever I'm writing about Austen's faith and the religious lives of her characters. Thank you to Brenda S. Cox for creating this invaluable resource!"
Rachel Dodge, Praying with Jane
"Fashionable Goodness offers a magisterial study of the ways in which the Christian faith and the Anglican Church of Jane's day were not only foundational for her personal life but also for her talent as a writer.
"Detailed study of the novels is revealed throughout this book and constant reference and quotation from the novels show how strongly Christian beliefs and ethics underpin Jane's work. The book fully underlines that to read the novels without a religious framework in mind leaves the reader missing vitally important points about the presentation of both her plots and her characters.
"Brenda Cox's scholarly and detailed work is a triumph. It is easily read, . . . extremely helpful and accurate and particularly so when dealing with titles and the life and inner workings of the Anglican Church and its clergy in the late 18th century.
"The volume also provides a wide and fascinating panorama of Anglicanism in the 18th century and of the various challenges the Church and wider society faced. In effect the volume is a marvellous compendium and a valuable handbook to turn to when reading (or indeed re-reading) the novels; the many insights it offers will undoubtedly instruct and enrich an understanding and appreciation of Jane's skill as a writer and of her life as a devout Christian."
Michael Kenning, Rector of Steventon 1992-2010, Vice-Chairman of the Jane Austen Society
"A meticulously researched, faultlessly organized, and engaging study of how religion, in all its forms, features in Jane Austen's world, her life, and her writings.
"Starting with Henry Tilney's famous defense of 'the English' in Northanger Abbey, Cox reveals the facts of Jane Austen's faith and the realities and challenges of practicing religion in the Regency period. With biographical sketches of the leading religious leaders and analyses of the various denominations of the time, she puts into context the explicit and subtle religious references in Austen's novels.
"This Christian world permeates Austen's writings. . . . You will look at Mr. Collins, the Crawfords, the Dashwoods, the Tilneys, the Wickhams, the Willoughbys, and especially Fanny Price!-all the 'good' and the 'not so good' people who populate the novels, with new and surprising insights. Bravo to Brenda Cox for giving us this very accessible, illuminating take on the 'fashionable goodness' of Austen's era!"
Deborah Barnum, Jane Austen in Vermont, Bygone Books, and Reading with Austen: Returning the Lost Sheep of Godmersham
"Brenda Cox's Fashionable Goodness is an indispensable guide to all things religious in Jane Austen's world. . . . a proper understanding of 18th century Christianity is necessary for a full appreciation of Austen's works. Cox provides this understanding. . . . This work will appeal to novice readers of Austen as well as scholars and specialists."
Roger E. Moore, Vanderbilt University, Jane Austen and the Reformation
Earn by promoting books