TY - JOUR
T1 - A hint of it, with initials
T2 - Adultery, textuality and publicity in Jane Austen's Lady Susan
AU - Russell, Gillian
PY - 2010/12
Y1 - 2010/12
N2 - In spite of Jane Austen's professed eye for an adulteress, comparatively little attention has been paid to adultery and divorce as themes and contexts of her fiction. Her unpublished epistolary novel Lady Susan has a distinctive status in Austen's oeuvre, recognized as being exemplary of her style and yet atypical of her later achievement. A neglected context for the novel is the extensive reporting of adultery trials in contemporary print culture and the moral panic concerning adultery in the 1780s and 1790s, focusing initially on the adulteress as the brazen woman of fashion and later as a figure of sentimentalized abjection. A particularly notorious case, that involving Lady Henrietta Grosvenor and George III's brother, the Duke of Cumberland, is directly alluded to in Lady Susan. The textual strategies of adultery trial literature, particularly its emphasis on indirection through the use of detail or hint, had a long-term influence on the development of Austen's fiction and her positioning of herself as a professional writer after the 1790s.
AB - In spite of Jane Austen's professed eye for an adulteress, comparatively little attention has been paid to adultery and divorce as themes and contexts of her fiction. Her unpublished epistolary novel Lady Susan has a distinctive status in Austen's oeuvre, recognized as being exemplary of her style and yet atypical of her later achievement. A neglected context for the novel is the extensive reporting of adultery trials in contemporary print culture and the moral panic concerning adultery in the 1780s and 1790s, focusing initially on the adulteress as the brazen woman of fashion and later as a figure of sentimentalized abjection. A particularly notorious case, that involving Lady Henrietta Grosvenor and George III's brother, the Duke of Cumberland, is directly alluded to in Lady Susan. The textual strategies of adultery trial literature, particularly its emphasis on indirection through the use of detail or hint, had a long-term influence on the development of Austen's fiction and her positioning of herself as a professional writer after the 1790s.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=79953236932&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/09699082.2010.508888
DO - 10.1080/09699082.2010.508888
M3 - Article
SN - 0969-9082
VL - 17
SP - 469
EP - 486
JO - Women's Writing
JF - Women's Writing
IS - 3
ER -