ljwrites: Black-and-white portrait of Jane Austen (Jane Austen)

For the Pride Fanwork Prompt Fest on [community profile] queerly_beloved, prompt is by [personal profile] fred_mouse. Posted here to be linked in a reply because of content warning (mention of marital rape/reluctant sex).

Fandom: Pride and Prejudice
Pairing: Elizabeth Darcy/Charlotte Collins
Prompt: stepping out
Summary: Elizabeth's friend Charlotte's happy news leads to a less happy revelation and a long-overdue talk between the friends.
Bisexual Elizabeth and lesbian Charlotte, emotion, angst, and fluff. Lightly implied bisexual Mr. Darcy and former Darcy/Wickham.

Mention of marital rape/reluctant sex )

ljwrites: Black-and-white portrait of Jane Austen (Jane Austen)

For the Pride Fanwork Prompt Fest on [community profile] queerly_beloved, prompt is by [personal profile] fred_mouse. Posted here to be linked in a reply because of content warning (mention of marital rape/reluctant sex).

Fandom: Pride and Prejudice
Pairing: Elizabeth Darcy/Charlotte Collins
Prompt: stepping out
Summary: Elizabeth's friend Charlotte's happy news leads to a less happy revelation and a long-overdue talk between the friends.
Bisexual Elizabeth and lesbian Charlotte, emotion, angst, and fluff. Lightly implied bisexual Mr. Darcy and former Darcy/Wickham.

Mention of marital rape/reluctant sex )

ljwrites: Black-and-white portrait of Jane Austen (Jane Austen)

It's no secret that Fanny Price, the heroine of Jane Austen's novel Mansfield Park, is far from the most beloved Austenian heroine. Fanny has been called a moralistic prude who gets everything by doing nothing. She is evidently deemed not to be liberated and feminist enough, seeing how she was replaced in two different movie adaptations by laughing, athletic, and outgoing heroines who bear little resemblance to her original character.

How do I love Fanny? Let me count the ways )

ljwrites: Black-and-white portrait of Jane Austen (Jane Austen)

Wisdom is better than Wit, & in the long run will certainly have the laugh on her side.

-- Jane Austen

This quote, from one of Austen's letters, was introduced in Tony Tanner's 1966 introduction to the Penguin Books edition of Mansfield Park, as part of an explanation of the book's themes and symbolism and why it is so different from her beloved earlier works. It's certainly even more poignant coming from a woman who loved wit as much as Austen did, as Tanner pointed out. Look at her ironic slyness in this very sentence, envisioning Wisdom as "getting the last laugh" over Wit when laughter is generally thought to be the province of the latter.

ljwrites: Black-and-white portrait of Jane Austen (Jane Austen)
My husband and I are going through a Pride and Prejudice kick. It started with pitching in to fund the card game based on the novel, Marrying Mr. Darcy. When the funding for the game was successful and we got our PDF version, I printed out the sheets on cardstock paper and cut the printouts into cards. (It now occurs to me shelling out for overseas shipping might have been a better use of resources, but what's done is done.)

Game Intro and Breakdown )

And of course, we'll totally be playing the zombie expansion pack after reading the Pride and Prejudice and Zombies book. Which is lying on the table next to the Pride and Prejudice BBC miniseries DVD. DON"T YOU JUDGE US WE'RE ACTUALLY WELL-ADJUSTED AND MATURE ADULTS OKAY

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ljwrites: A typewriter with multicolored butterflies on it. (Default)
L.J. Lee

August 2019

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