It was an exhilarating experience to be with 600+ Jane Austen fans in Portland OR from October 27-31, 2010, for the yearly AGM on the topic of "Jane Austen and the Abbey: Mystery, Mayhem and Muslin." At right, a collection of costumes on exhibit in the Milsom Street Emporium. Frankly, I was much more interested in all the books on sale -- but I tried to be judicious in my choices.
A pre-conference offering was the presentation:
"Team Tilney Explains It All," a light-hearted look at the (beloved) hero (center) of Northanger Abbey.
Team TilneyL l-r, Margaret Sullivan, Kelly Brown, Henry Tilney, Heather Laurence, Lynn Marie Macy.
On Friday afternoon, the AGM officially opened with a talk by Stephanie Barron, author of the Jane Austen mystery series. She analyzed Northanger Abbey as a mystery plot by which Catherine and Henry learn about each other and grow toward a lasting relationship, a very clever take on the novel.
Ms. Barron has a new book, Jane and the Madness of Lord Byron, which promises to be another fascinating read for those of us who love her imaginative style. She said she combs through Austen's letters for kernels of information she turns into her stories.
Janine Barchas of the University of Texas, Austin, spoke on Bluebeard's Castle. She suggested that Jane Austen had probably visited the ruins of Farley Hungerford Castle near Bath. A period guide to Bath and its environs was owned by the Austens and contained information the castle and its bloody history, which could well have been one of JA's inspiratons for Catherine's suspicions of mayhem at Northanger Abbey.
The next break out I attended was --MINE! Kim Wilson, left, author of Tea with Jane Austen and Jane Austen in the Garden, and I presented "About Those Abbeys...in Fact, Fiction and Landscape." I will post about our talk soon. This is a picture of Kim and me at a previous event. I was too busy with our power point to take photos.
The next morning, Saturday, we prepared for a busy day. Juliet McMaster gave the opening plenary talk on "A Surmise of Such Horror: Catherine Morland's Imagination." As with Jeff's talk, the audience was charmed, amused and illuminated by Juliet. I fear I have run out of space, so I will conclude now, and report on other AGM events in Parts Two, Three, and Four upcoming.




What a wonderful program. It must be lovely to just lose yourselves in Austen for a few days, and all you have to do is think about her and her books.
ReplyDeleteI am SO jealous! This sounds heavenly! One day!
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