A Novel Weekend
at Genesee Country Village & Museum
featuring Emma
Saturday & Sunday, August 7 & 8
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| 1813 - owned by the British Musem |
Click here for more information.
Based in Rochester, NY - Covering Central NY, Western NY, North Country NY, Mohawk Valley NY & Southern Tier NY with members in Rochester, Buffalo, Syracuse, Binghamton and Utica areas.
A Novel Weekend
at Genesee Country Village & Museum
featuring Emma
Saturday & Sunday, August 7 & 8
![]() |
| 1813 - owned by the British Musem |
Registration for each event opens during the early part of the month in which the event takes place
Alden O’Brien is the Curator of Costume and Textiles at the DAR Museum in Washington DC. She has curated numerous exhibitions on quilts and clothing, including “Fashioning the New Woman,” “Eye on Elegance: Early Quilts of Maryland and Virginia,” and "’An Agreeable Tyrant’: Fashion After the Revolution,” which was on view during the Washington, DC AGM. A fan of period drama since her mother let her stay up late to watch Masterpiece Theatre in its earliest years, Alden has frequently lectured on period costume design, especially focusing on the Regency.
Registration for each event opens during the early part of the month in which the event takes place
Professor Moore's attention to detail and sense of humor make him a very enjoyable speaker. He served as a plenary speaker at the 2019 AGM in Williamsburg, VA.
Please click here to register by
Thursday, April 15 at 11:59 pm
Roger E. Moore is Associate Dean of the College of Arts and Science and Principal Senior Lecturer in English at Vanderbilt, where he has taught since 1995. He is responsible for advising undergraduate students on a variety of academic issues, from designing interdisciplinary majors to applying for leaves of absence from the University. He chairs the Administrative Committee, which considers all aspects of the academic records of Arts and Science students, including class promotion, probationary status, and student petitions for exceptions to faculty legislation.
A specialist in early-modern English literature and religion, he is the author of scholarly articles on Christopher Marlowe, Sir Philip Sidney, and Geoffrey Chaucer, among others, in SEL, Religion and Literature and Studies in Philology. His most recent work explores nostalgia for monasteries and the monastic life in England from the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries, work that has inspired two articles on Jane Austen and his book, Jane Austen and the Reformation: Remembering the Sacred Landscape (Ashgate/Routledge 2016). The recipient of the Harriet S. Gilliam Award for Excellence in Teaching (2003) and the Ernest A. Jones Faculty Adviser Award (2008), Moore teaches courses in seventeenth-century literature and the English Reformation as well as introductory writing courses and surveys of British literature.
Dean Moore serves on the Board of Directors of the Nashville Ballet and is Senior Warden of the Vestry at Christ Church Cathedral (Episcopal).
Registration for each event opens during the early part of the month in which the event takes place
March
World Premiere!
"The Early Life of Lady Catherine de Bourgh"
Saturday, March 20 at 1:00 pm EDT
Click here to register.
The Austen Alliance ebook, What Jane Austen Didn't Tell Us! can be purchased from Amazon.
Registration for each event opens during the first week of the month in which the event takes place
February
Q & A with Soniah Kamal
Author of Unmarriageable
A witty modern retelling of Pride and Prejudice set in Pakistan
Saturday, February 20 at 1:00 pm
Register here by Thursday,
February 18 at 11:59 pm EST
Soniah Kamal is a lifetime member of the Jane Austen Society
of North America (JASNA). She serves on the JASNA Equity, Diversity, and
Inclusion Committee (JEDI). Soniah was a Featured Plenary Panelist
at 2020 JASNA AGM and she was the 2020 Keynote Speaker at the Jane Austen
Festival held by JASNA Louisville, Kentucky.
Soniah is an award-winning novelist, essayist, and public speaker. Her recent novel, Unmarriageable, is a Financial Times Readers’ Best Book of 2019, a 2019 Book All Georgians Should Read, a 2020 Georgia Author of the Year in Literary Fiction nominee and shortlisted for the 2020 Townsend Prize for Fiction. Her debut novel, An Isolated Incident, was a finalist for the KLF French Fiction Prize and the Townsend Prize for Fiction. Soniah’s TEDx talk is about second chances and ‘We are the Ink’, her U.S. Citizenship Oath Ceremony address is about immigrants and the American Dream. Her work is in the New York Times, Guardian, Buzzfeed, Catapult, Normal School, Georgia Review, and more.
Soniah was born in Pakistan, grew up in England and Saudi
Arabia, and lived all over the US, and currently in Georgia.
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Registration for each event opens during the first week of the month in which the event takes place.
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| William Wilberforce a leader in the movement to abolish the British slave trade By Anton Hickel - Image: Bridgeman Art Gallery; Portrait: Wilberforce House, Hull Museum |
"But I do talk to him more than I used. I am sure I do. Did not you hear me ask him about the slave-trade last night?" Mansfield Park chapter 21
With 2020 behind us we can hopefully look forward to better things in 2021. Here is JASNA's Central and Western New York region we will begin the year with our Jane and Cassandra Austen Birthday celebration. We will continue to be virtual for awhile yet, but, perhaps by the fall we will be able to gather in person again.
Please join us to hear Tricia Matthew, University of Buffalo Scholar in Residence seek on "I hope white hands": Abolition and the Female Consumer. From the speaker:
"Based on my research trip to seven cities in the United Kingdom, this talk focuses on abolition, Josiah Wedgwood, and women as consumers. When we pay attention to the ways that the three intersect, we can better understand Regency-era culture and the rituals it taught women to follow as they participated more fully in public debates."
Details below:
Link to registration form
https://forms.gle/
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| Jane Austen Watercolor by Cassandra Austen |
Thank you
Speaker: Susan Allen Ford is Editor of Persuasions and Persuasions On-Line and Professor of English Emerita at Delta State University. She has published essays on Jane Austen and her contemporaries, detective fiction, and the Gothic, and is slowly working on a book on what Austen’s characters are reading.
Topic: “Just in a happy state of flounce”: Jane Austen's economies of alteration. Susan examines Austen’s interest in clothing, particularly in terms of buying, making and altering it and also how clothing defines people, taking on almost human characteristics.
Here is the link to the registration form