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The Genteel Reading Circle For Ladies

231 replies

EverySongbirdSays · 21/04/2016 14:36

In which like minds will discuss Jane Austen and other such 19th Century Classics sparked from an unhealthy interest in the sex life of one Mr Collins, parson to her ladyship Catherine De Bourgh of Rosings Park

First up : Sense And Sensibility


Bring your love of Dashwood, Brandon, Willoughby, Farrars, and Emma Thompson's weird crying noise here!!!

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Maryz · 21/04/2016 14:41

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lucysnowe · 21/04/2016 15:45

What a good idea! Yes will try S&S altho it's my least favourite as not enough romance in it.

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Cantthinkofafunnyname · 21/04/2016 15:47

Been loving the other thread - I've found my people! Grin

Loved the Emma Thompson film of S&S although did think that her and Alan Rickman were too old for the parts they played which was a shame. AR and Kate Winslett just didn't look right together. Willoughby on the other hand.... He may be a heartless cad but that wouldn't bother me!!

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PerspicaciaTick · 21/04/2016 15:54

Alan Rickman was the most desirable JA adapation of a character ever Marianne definitely got lucky there.

I like S&S and it is about time I reread it. Hopefully you will all be able to help clarify some of the bemusing bits for me.

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AcrossthePond55 · 21/04/2016 16:14

Good Day, Ladies.

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BoatyMcBoat · 21/04/2016 16:18

Hello!

PerspicaciaTick, I entirely agree with you that AR was the most desirable Brandon there could be; and that Marianne got very very lucky.

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gruffaloshmuffalo · 21/04/2016 16:25

Excellent, I'll reread it!

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ArcheryAnnie · 21/04/2016 17:22

Signing in!

(I saw S&S in real time at the cinema when it came out, and an audible gasp that rippled around my group at that bit when Col. Brandon leans, dishevelled and despairing, against the wall outside Marianne's sickroom. Alan Rickman: endlessly sexy.)

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Cantthinkofafunnyname · 21/04/2016 17:54

I had to go to the cinema on my own to watch S&S when it came out as no-one I knew wanted to see it. Was ok though as I really enjoyed it and despite my earlier comment about ET being too old I did think her performance was great, esp the sickroom scene (I may have had a little teary moment during that). And don't get me wrong I adore AR but I just couldn't see him and KW as a couple - but then also didn't get KW and Leo as a couple in Titanic!

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EverySongbirdSays · 21/04/2016 18:40

"give me an occupation Miss Dashwood or I shall run mad"

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GrouchyKiwi · 21/04/2016 18:57

I love the film adaptation of S&S by Emma Thompson, but only when I ignore how old some of the actors are.

Looking forward to rereading this, despite how much of a drip Marianne is.

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VinceNoirLovesHowardMoon · 21/04/2016 18:58

Good day ladies!

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raisedbyguineapigs · 21/04/2016 19:01

Got distracted by Prince dying Sad but am marking my place. Will start S&S

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absolutelynotfabulous · 21/04/2016 19:12

I dunno......many people see Marianne as free, romantic and impetuous but I see her as silly, selfish and melodramatic. Brandon is way too good for her imho (especially AR's Brandon).

I love the way JA fleshes out her minor characters: I loved the Hugh Laurie character reminds me of DP, the bastard, the nasty Ferrers mother and sister, and the Miss Steeles.

JA had a cruel sense of humour and it shows. I'm not sure I can think of a character she's entirely sympathetic towards. I like Elinor, though; one of her more sympathetic female characters, imho.

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Cantthinkofafunnyname · 21/04/2016 19:39

How old was Marianne? Wasn't she 16? I think of her as a lovesick teenager so you can sort of understand how dramatic it all feels to her. I can just about remember my first crush/love and it was soooo intense and there were lots of tears!

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absolutelynotfabulous · 21/04/2016 19:56

She was 16 or 17. But she was allowed to live out the drama despite her actions (going with Willoughby to his aunt's, for example) being contrary to the social mores of the time.

Mrs D should have been more circumspect; instead she encouraged the liaison. She knew nothing about Willoughby and did not advise caution, when imho she should have.

Something I've never understood about Marianne's illness: was it self-imposed or not?

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EverySongbirdSays · 21/04/2016 20:03

I thought she had got hypothermia, depression also strongly implied, self imposed in the sense of 'catching one's death from standing in the rain staring forelornely at the ex's house'

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PerspicaciaTick · 21/04/2016 20:07

I think Marianne's illness is similar to Jane's in P&P, a minor illness which quickly escalates due to a lack of effective medicine.

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Cantthinkofafunnyname · 21/04/2016 20:24

I agree that her mother should have been a lot more careful with willoughby and not indulged Marianne so much. But then maybe she was being a bit mercenary and thinking that if Marianne married him they'd all have somewhere nicer to live?

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RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 21/04/2016 20:29

S&S is my favourite.

I thought the worst thing about the Emma Thompson film was Thompson. She should have stuck to scripting it and not deluded herself that she could pass for young enough to play Elinor. I think Kate W and obviously Alan are both exquisite in it though. Greg W good too.

I think Marianne's illness is real, but iirc it's hinted that it's made worse by the fact that she completely surrenders to her grief and doesn't try to help herself, almost as if she's half willing herself to die.

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RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 21/04/2016 20:30

Mrs D is a romantic, which is where Marianne gets it from. I don't think she's thinking about money at all in encouraging the imprudent gadding about with Willoughby, just lurve.

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IrenetheQuaint · 21/04/2016 20:37


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VinceNoirLovesHowardMoon · 21/04/2016 20:42

The illnesses are a bit anachronistic. There aren't many illnesses that you can actually catch from getting wet in a rainstorm are there? I assumed that jane's was flu and i suppose marriane could have had pneumonia or diphtheria, or something else life threatening that isn't around any more.

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IrenetheQuaint · 21/04/2016 20:45

There is a lot of hysteria about illness, definitely - Jane clearly just had a feverish cold - but I guess it's understandable in an age when everyone would have known people carried off by illnesses that would now be treated easily by antibiotics/a couple of days in hospital on a drip.

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RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 21/04/2016 20:49

Austen was never afraid of using illness as a plot device. :) A pity she didn't kill Fanny Price off with a nasty bout of snivelling.

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