Austenalia: A Jane Austen Panel
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 5 окт 2024
- www.chapman.edu... Dr. Lynda Hall hosts Austenalia, a panel discussion featuring and celebrating authors Syrie James, Karen Joy Fowler, Diana Birchall, and Laurie Viera Rigler for their work based on the novels of Jane Austen as part of Chapman University's 150th Anniversary celebration.
-----
Author information:
Syrie James: More information about author Syrie James can be found on her website, www.syriejames.com or on her facebook or Twitter page @Syriejames.
Karen Joy Fowler: More information on author Karen Fowler may be found at www.karenjoyfowler.com
Diana Birchall: More information on author Diana Birchall can be found at www.dianabirchall.net.
Laurie Viera Rigler: More information on Laure Rigler can be found at www.janeaustenaddict.com, and her web series can be found at www.babelgum.com/sexandtheaustengirl
This program and similar literary discussions are available on iTunes U:
itunes.apple.c...
The actual session begins around 12:20, with introductions of the panelists, and then at 22:50 the discussion begins.
still lots or intro until 23:00, which is when the panelists begin to speak.
Thank you!
@@PinoyMN
Thank you to you and the OP 🙏
Don't dis Fanny Price!
She was ten, uprooted without notice, without permission from a large, close, loving family where she was loved and valued and put into a hostile family where she recommended day after day that she was "less than".
She is a wonderfully strong character.
I thoroughly enjoyed hearing everyone's stories. Thanks.
This was a funny and interesting discussion, thank you!
I agree with the panelist that wants to see the book on screen instead of prettified versions, that is why I like the 1980s BBC miniseries versions best as adaptations. They don't reword dialog and make up scenes. They convey the true spirit of the book and it's wit without exaggeration.
It's called her juvenilia, from the word "juvenile", it's not from Juvenal.. that would be a completely different writer, as there was an ancient Roman writer called Juvenal.
It's Ciaran Hinds, not Ciarian.
And you can find it on RUclips