This weekend I saw Becoming Jane, a film that fictionalizes Jane Austen in the same way that movies have fictionalized her novels. Yes, I know the novels are fiction. But the film treatments of these novels in a certain sense fictionalizes the texts they are based on—going beyond mere reading or interpretation of the texts to willfully create an entirely new entity with independent lives of their own. And so it is with this movie’s treatment of “Jane’s” (as opposed to “Austen’s”) life (for which we do not really have a text, since lives are not texts, however many documents it may leave behind). And although all biographies and history are fictional in the sense that they use narrative and speculation and imagination to make sense of the “facts” that come to us through documents, fictionalizations are conscious, willful departures from texts and documented facts.
Becoming Jane fits into both the “Heritage” genre (as cultural studies scholars call it) and the more widely recognized genre of biopic which can range from the charmingly ridiculous (think Shakespeare in Love, Amadeus and Impromptu) to serious (Frieda and Vincent and Theo). Altman said about Vincent and Theo: “I’m sure my film is not factual, but I hope it’s truthful.” I suspect Julian Jarrold, the film’s director, imagined he was being in some sense “truthful” with his fantasies about “Jane.” Since most people’s sense of truth fondly imposes anachronism on texts and lives alike in service to the cherished notion of the “Universal,” I was fully prepared for the sorts of anachronistic distortions that typify the whole “Jane” film genre (and largely account for their appeal to such a wide—albeit largely female—audience)—which was, of course, exactly what Becoming Jane delivered.
Near the beginning of the film, we see Jane seated at a desk, writing, with a pair of scissors positioned near her ink pot. And then we see her sister Cassandra, reading the letter Jane has written her that is literally full of numerous rectangular holes, cut with meticulous precision, so that Jane’s beautiful script is not marred by inked out deletions. Jane, it seems, wields a pair of blades to edit her letters (rather than producing a clean second draft through copying, as we see her doing with her fiction). Likely the filmmaker provides this image to amuse his viewers (and it certainly did amuse me), but it reminded me from the outset that one of the reasons we know little about Jane Austen and her private life is because Cassandra purged her sister’s letters after her death, to be sure that no minor blot or imperfection would mar the image of her sister that Cassandra wished to project.
Which is to say, since her death, very little has been known about Jane Austen’s private life or, indeed, about her personality or the character of her social relationships.
My sense of dead authors generally takes one of two modes. In rare instances, I will have read the author’s letters and diaries or memoirs, their essays and other nonfiction, and possibly biographies about them. In some indefinable sense, what I know about such an author will merge somehow with my reading of their work. My sense of Virginia Woolf, for instance, partakes of that mode. But the most common mode is that of the author as a near-blank. In this mode, I know a few facts about the author but have no real picture of their life or personality: the author is a name and the producer of a voice that I do know. In other words, I know the second self that the author created. My sense of Jane Austen partakes of that mode. I never think of the real person who produced the voice in which her novels are written when I’m reading her work: she is absent and may as well not exist.
So, as browsing the Seattle movie listings I read that the film was showing (the first that I knew it had even been made) and decided to see it, I realized that I lacked an image of Jane Austen substantial enough to be challenged or affronted by whatever image the movie had chosen to create of her. And I found that an odd realization to make, especially as I went on to consider how the fans of the “Jane” film genre have invented a “Jane” (largely based on their consensual re-invention of “Lizzie,” as so many call Elizabeth Bennet) they are sure they know intimately and do, of course, love.
This train of thought called to mind D.A. Miller’s celebration of Austen’s voice in the opening passage of Jane Austen: or The Secret of Style:
Whereas Emma’s talk merely held Harriet with the charm of a person, what Austen’s writing channeled for us [who read Austen early—say, at eleven or twelve, the age when she began writing] was the considerably more exciting appeal of no longer being one. Here was a truly out-of-body voice, so stirringly free of what it abhorred as “particularity” or “singularity” that it seemed to come from no enunciator at all. It scanted person even in the linguistic sense, rarely acknowledging, by saying I, its origination in an authoring self, or, by saying you, its reception by any other. We rapt, admiring readers might feel we were only eavesdropping on delightful productions intended for nobody in particular. And in other constituents of person—not just body, but psyche, history, social position—the voice was also deficient, so much so that its overall impersonality determined a narrative authority and a beauty of expression both without equal. The former, bare of personal specifications that might situate and hence subvert it, rose to absoluteness; while the latter, likewise emptied of self, achieved classic self-containment. No extraneous static encumbered the dictation of a grammar that completed, and an art that finished, every crystalline sentence. Altogether, such thrillingly inhuman utterance was not stylish; it was Style itself.
While Becoming Jane does not offer us an image of Jane Austen powerful enough to stamp the imagination forever with its imprint (or, I would guess, even set out to do so), its entire point, however, is to fix that voice to the fantasy of a particular person, body, and set of experiences that the movie imagines made Austen the author she became. (Hence, of course, the “becoming.”) Much of the delight of a film aimed at fans of “Jane” must, of course, be the constant occurrence of recognizable lines and figures from the film versions of the novels.
And so Anne Hathaway’s Jane herself is naturally an amalgamation of Austen’s heroines, while the people in her life and the situations she finds herself in are a combination of those to be found in her novels, fashioned onto a few carefully selected struts of the framework that is the little that is known of Jane Austen’s life. (For the record, the film’s hero, Tom Lefroy, was in real life a member of the bar in Ireland, had nine children with the woman he married in 1799, and became Lord Chief Justice of Ireland in 1852; Austen did mention him in a few letters and remarked of him that he was “a great admirer of Tom Jones” [which book Austen no doubt read without Lefroy’s prompting] and that that admiration inspired his only fault, that of wearing light-colored and colorful coats.)
It’s a formula that works perfectly to create a film that fits nicely within the Jane-film genre. Thus, Jane’s mother, Mrs. Austen, resembles the two television-film versions of Mrs. Bennet; Judge Langlois resembles the General in Northanger Abbey; Lucy Lefroy resembles Mary in Pride and Prejudice; Lady Gresham (a wholly invented character) combines Lady Catherine de Burgh and Lady Dalrymple in Persuasion, and so on. Even more importantly, perhaps, the characters spout familiar lines.
Jarrold affords us occasional moments of recognition of scenes from other, non-Austen heritage films: how can we not recall Merchant-Ivory’s Room with a View when seeing Jane and the Countess running through the woods after LeFroy and Jane’s brother Henry, to watch them strip off their clothes & dive naked into the water (even as we also think of Colin Frith’s Darcy nude in his bath and later diving into a pond to cool off after a long ride home)?
Still, most narratives have subtexts, and this movie is no exception. The principal subtext is rather heavy-handed: the sexual excitement and romantic infatuation followed by self-sacrifice of her affair with Lefroy gave Jane the experience she needed to produce those wonderful novels. And yet a second, subtler subtext offers a kernel of truth to be found beneath the multiple layers of the film’s fantasy. This emerges in the scene in which Jane meets Mrs. Radcliffe, the Gothic novelist who actually made a living by her pen, and realizes there might be an alternative to the life her mother tells her she must accept. Mrs. Radcliffe’s novels involve wild adventure and exotic travel. When Jane asks her about her experience (which Tom has been telling her she needs to acquire in order to write Real Novels), Mrs. Radcliffe comments that imagination can make up for all that the writer lacks in experience.
Becoming Jane had a few jarring moments, of course. I can’t imagine what possessed Jarrold to have Jane make a crack about who may judge who’s really important, for the crack was obviously intended to draw attention to how much more important she would become posthumously, when all those who viewed her as an impertinent, insignificant chit had sunk into ordinary obscurity: thus winking to the viewer to enjoy the irony (which certainly did not need to be pointed out to anyone in the theater).
In sum, the movie was a frolic that accomplished its aim and I’ve no doubt it will give the fans of “Jane” repeated hours of pleasure. Still, it would have been interesting to have had Robert Altman’s version of Jane Austen: I can’t help but thinking he might have been more interested in elucidating the enigma D.A. Miller admires, rather than conflating the fictionalizations of the writer's fictions with the writer.
Sorry to intrude, but this popped up on my Google alert and I had to respond.
ReplyDelete. . .one of the reasons we know little about Jane Austen and her private life is because Cassandra purged her sister’s letters after her death, to be sure that no minor blot or imperfection would mar the image of her sister that Cassandra wished to project.
Untrue, and unfair to Cassandra. She destroyed the letters that Jane had written to her because they were written to Cassandra and were no one else's business, and it was common practice in those days to do so. She kept a few as remembrances of Jane for favorite nieces, and yes, she cut out bits that were too personal or might hurt someone's feelings, because that pretty much ruins the effect of an item meant as a remembrance of a dead relative. Someone of Jane's and Cassandra's generation would never have dreamed that her letters would ever be published. That's a completely different thing from carefully leaving only what she wanted to be published.
Incidentally, most of the Jane Austen fans I know who have seen the film pretty much hated it. It's targeted for the general public, not anyone knowledgeable about Jane Austen's life and work. Don't blame us because Hollywood is under the impression that Jane Austen wrote sweet romances, or that they know teenagers will flock to such films in droves.
Thanks for dropping by, Mags.
ReplyDeleteI'd thought I'd made clear that by "fans of Jane" I meant not people who focus on the written novels of Jane Austen, but those who are devoted to the film and television fictionalizations of the original fictions (who typically talk about "Jane" as though they know her intimately) & who regard her novels as the quintessence of romance novels (sweet or otherwise). The novels are of course many things to many scholars, & as Karen Joy Fowler remarked in an essay published a while back in The Believer, most serious readers (including many sophisticated scholars) who have read the novels numerous times over the course of their lives tend to come up with new readings every time they pick them up. I rather suspect D.A. Miller hit the nail on the head when he talked about the absolute impersonality of the voice Austen produced in her novels, since it would help explain why each reading comes as fresh as it does.
I would assume from your comment, Mags, that you're a fan of Jane Austen, not "Jane" (who for many "Jane" fans is a thinly veiled "Lizzie").
The circumstances of the letters is a bit more complicated than you suggest. We all need to be wary of making anachronistic assumptions when thinking & talking about eighteenth-century behavior. Scholar Deborah Kaplan writes at length about the important functions of letter- writing in the social milieu Jane Austen inhabited in Jane Austen Among Women. Although a few letters were absolutely private (& thus were to be burned immediately after being read), most were "corporate family productions" intended to be read out loud to the recipient's circle of family and friends (often several times), with (very occasionally) select passages marked as not to be shared. (Private letters meant to be burned were rare, likely because secret transmission would be very difficult to arrange & guarantee.) As Kaplan notes: "There were times when women wrote without the accompanying instructions of their male relatives and with the assurance their letters would not be seen by anyone but the letter's addressee, but these occasions were rare."
You are correct, though, in questioning my assumption about Cassandra Austen's motives, for these can only be speculated on. She may well have had another motive than wishing to project a certain image of her sister.
I'm glad you watched this movie, Timmi, because now I can comment on it without having seen it. Having already contributed a post about a book supposedly based on Jane Austen's work (Austenland)
ReplyDeletethat I haven't read, I decided I shouldn't comment on a movie that I haven't seen. But now I have a little room to rant.
You're right, of course, that we don't know much about Jane Austen's life, except for what she put in her books. And what I've always seen there is not the romance, but the constricted lives of bright and competent women. In fact, I find it almost impossible to read much Austen -- it hurts too much.
The idea that she needed a man to "open her up" so she could write offends me on another, more basic feminist level. That's one of those classic male delusions, that women need sex with the right man to make them whole. I may be touchy on this subject because I recall a physics professor who, when I rejected his pass, called me anti-intellectual because I didn't want to sleep with him.
As far as I'm concerned, only deluded women latch onto the romance in Austen's books as if it was what that life was all about. And only deluded men think someone must have a great love to write well.