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Austen Chat

Austen Chat

De: Jane Austen Society of North America
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Welcome to Austen Chat, the podcast of the Jane Austen Society of North America (JASNA). Join us each month as we interview scholars, authors, and subject experts on a wide range of topics related to Austen’s writings, her life and times, and more. There is always more to learn and enjoy about Jane!


© 2026 Jane Austen Society of North America
Arte Historia y Crítica Literaria
Episodios
  • Jane Austen & Hypochondriacs: A Visit with Sarah Marsh
    Apr 2 2026

    Jane Austen's novels feature a number of characters we might describe as "hypochondriacs" today: Mr. Woodhouse, Mary Musgrove, and Mrs. Churchill, to name a few. Although she never used the word herself, Austen was adept at exploring how the worries and complaints of individuals preoccupied with their health affected the people around them.

    Professor Sarah Marsh joins us in this episode to discuss health and medicine in the Regency era, the parallels between the health of individuals and the health of the British nation in Sanditon, and Austen's reflections on her own declining health during the final months of her life.

    Sarah Marsh is an associate professor of English at Seton Hill University and director of the Jane Austen Summer Program. She has presented and published extensively on Austen, literature, and medicine, including the article “‘All the Egotism of an Invalid’: Hypochondria as Form in Jane Austen’s Sanditon.” Her forthcoming book, Novel Constitutions and the Making of Race: A Literary and Legal History of Slavery in the Anglophone Atlantic, 1688–1818, will be published by Oxford University Press.

    For an edited transcript and show notes, visit https://jasna.org/austen/podcast/ep34

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    Visit our website: www.jasna.org
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    Email: podcast@jasna.org

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    45 m
  • Jane Austen & Needlework: A Visit with Jennie Batchelor
    Mar 5 2026

    "Elizabeth took up some needlework, and was sufficiently amused in attending to what passed between Darcy and his companion." Pride and Prejudice

    Jane Austen often wove needlework and other domestic crafts into her novels in thoughtful and meaningful ways. In this episode, Professor Jennie Batchelor joins us to discuss Austen’s own skill with a needle and explore how she used such “women’s work” to reveal her characters’ strengths and flaws, illuminate their social and power dynamics (think Mrs. Norris and Fanny Price), and reflect their thoughts and feelings.

    Jennie Batchelor is a professor of 18th-century and Romantic studies and Head of English and Related Literature at the University of York. She was also the inaugural Postdoctoral Fellow in Women’s Writing (1660-1830) at Chawton House Library and the University of Southampton. She has published widely on women writers of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, on early magazines, and on women’s work, dress, and craft. In 2020, she published Jane Austen Embroidery with Alison Larkin, which includes 15 stitching projects based on 18th-century patterns.

    For an edited transcript and show notes, visit https://jasna.org/austen/podcast/ep33

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    Visit our website: www.jasna.org
    Follow us on Instagram and Facebook
    Subscribe to the podcast on our YouTube channel
    Email: podcast@jasna.org


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    49 m
  • Jane Austen & Her Letters: A Visit with Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade
    Feb 5 2026

    "My dearest Cassandra,

    The letter which I have this moment received from you has diverted me beyond moderation. I could die of laughter at it, as they used to say at school."
    —Jane Austen, September 1, 1796

    It's been speculated that Jane Austen may have written nearly 3,000 letters in her lifetime. While only 161 are known to have survived, that small collection offers a wealth of information about her daily life, her friends and family, her writing, and her voice. In this episode, historical sociolinguist Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade shares insights gained from her study of the language in Austen’s letters—from her vocabulary and spelling to her many instances of linguistic playfulness and clues about her dialect and accent.

    Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade is professor emeritus of English Sociohistorical Linguistics at Leiden University's Centre for Linguistics in the Netherlands. A member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences and a knight in the Order of the Netherlands Lion, she has published widely in her field. Her works include In Search of Jane Austen: The Language of the Letters (2014), an in-depth linguistic analysis of Austen’s correspondence.

    For an edited transcript and show notes, visit https://jasna.org/austen/podcast/ep32.

    *********

    Visit our website: www.jasna.org
    Follow us on Instagram and Facebook
    Subscribe to the podcast on our YouTube channel
    Email: podcast@jasna.org

    Más Menos
    45 m
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I enjoy the variety of topics & interesting guests . Looking forward to the next episode! It would be nice if at the end of each episode, we were told what would be in the next episode

Interesting & fun

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