Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Love and Freindship is a juvenile story by Jane Austen, dated 1790. While aged 11–18, Austen wrote her tales in three notebooks. These still exist, one in the Bodleian Library and the other two in the British Museum. They contain, among other works, Love and Freindship, written when she was 14, and The History of England, written at 15.
Whit Stillman's adaptation of Lady Susan, retitled Love & Friendship after Austen's juvenile work of that name, was included in the Sundance Film Festival in January 2016. The US release date was 13 May 2016. The film stars Kate Beckinsale, Chloe Sevigny, Xavier Samuel and Stephen Fry. [3] It received strongly positive reviews. [4]
Love & Friendship is a 2016 period romantic comedy-drama film written and directed by Whit Stillman. Based on Jane Austen 's epistolary novel Lady Susan , written c. 1794, the film stars Kate Beckinsale , Chloë Sevigny , Xavier Samuel , and Emma Greenwell .
Susan Gubar (New York: W. W. Norton, 2011), Women's Review of Books, (November/December 2011), pp. 3–5 “Just Like a Woman,” Review of A Jane Austen Education: How Six Novels Taught Me about Love, Friendship, and the Things that Really Matter, William Deresiewicz (Penguin, 2011) and Rachel M. Brownstein, Why Jane Austen? (Columbia ...
Eliza Capot, Comtesse de Feuillide (née Hancock; 22 December 1761 – 25 April 1813) was the cousin, and later sister-in-law, of novelist Jane Austen.She is believed to have been the inspiration for a number of Austen's works, such as Love and Freindship, Henry and Eliza, and Lady Susan.
The work is a burlesque which pokes fun at widely used schoolroom history books such as Oliver Goldsmith's 1771 The History of England from the Earliest Times to the Death of George II. [1] Austen mockingly imitates the style of textbook histories of English monarchs, while ridiculing historians' pretensions to objectivity.
Love & Friendship, a film version of Austen's early epistolary novel Lady Susan, was released in 2016. Directed by Whit Stillman and starring Kate Beckinsale and Chloë Sevigny, the film's title was taken from one of Austen's juvenile writings. [198]
Love (De L'Amour) by Stendhal; Love and Friendship: And Other Youthful Writings by Jane Austen; Love Visions: The Book of the Duchess; The House of Fame; The Parliament of Birds; The Legend of Good Women by Geoffrey Chaucer; Love-Letters Between a Nobleman and His Sister by Aphra Behn; Loving/Living/Party Going by Henry Green