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Showing posts with label Ackermann. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ackermann. Show all posts

Wednesday, 15 May 2019

VIGNETTES - My New E-book!

I'm very pleased to announce that I've just published a new book on Amazon Kindle: 'Vignettes: Literary Lives in the Age of Austen'.

Here's a copy of the blurb:

'Jane Austen lived in a ground-breaking era for English Literature. This was the age of William Wordsworth, Percy and Mary Shelley, John Keats, and others. Austen herself drew inspiration from the writers who came before her, like Doctor Johnson, Thomson and Cowper. She faced stiff competition from the rival novelists of her day like Ann Radcliffe, Mary Brunton, Fanny Burney and Walter Scott.
Away from the novelists’ world, writers like Mary Wollstonecraft argued passionately for women’s rights, and Parson Malthus, Robert Owen and Thomas Bernard discussed how best to deal with the poor.

Anna Laetitia Barbauld.
Based on the author’s previously published articles in Jane Austen's Regency World magazine, this lively exploration of Austen’s times also looks at popular literature. How did our tradition of Christmas ‘annuals’ begin? Were female novel-readers really the ‘slaves of vice’? Find out more in 'Vignettes'. '

Statue of Dr Johnson, Lichfield.
The book also discusses the career of poet Robert Burns, writer Robert Southey, and publisher Rudolph Ackermann. I hope you enjoy reading it as much as I've enjoyed researching the stories of all these wonderful writers over the years!

Monday, 10 March 2014

A Night At The Opera


On 8 January 1801, Jane Austen wrote to her sister Cassandra, who was staying at Godmersham Park: ‘I think you judge very wisely in putting off your London visit...You speak with such noble resignation of Mrs Jordan and the Opera House, that it would be an insult to suppose resignation required’.  By 25 January, Cassandra must have written to Jane to say that she would soon be on her way to the metropolis: ‘I hope you shall see everything worthy [of] notice, from the Opera House to Henry’s [their brother’s] office in Cleveland Court; and I shall expect you to lay in a stock of intelligence that may procure me amusement for twelve months to come’ (Lord Edward Brabourne, Letters of Jane Austen, 2 Vols., Richard Bentley & Son, 1884).

Which Opera House was Jane referring to? According to A Picture of London for 1802, (R. Phillips, c.1802), the Opera House, a ‘magnificent theatre’ was ‘situated at the lower end of the west side of the Haymarket’.  It was originally known as the Queen’s Theatre, and was built by John Vanbrugh in about 1705.  The Opera House ‘was open in the winter, and till Midsummer, for Italian operas and French ballets’.

However by about 1808, Ackermann’s Microcosm of London rather snootily commented that although the stage scenery was ‘very good’, the stage was ‘not sufficient for the magnificent ballets which the prevailing taste of the day requires’. 

In 1837 the Opera House was renamed Her Majesty’s Theatre, in honour of Queen Victoria’s accession to the throne.
Images from the author’s collection:
Evening dress. The Lady’s Magazine, January 1827.
The Opera House in 1800. Old and New London Vol. IV, 1878.