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  <title>Reading Jane Austen in the 21st Century with Patricia A. Matthew</title>
  <description>   250 years after her birth, Jane Austen is more popular than ever, with&amp;amp;nbsp;the publication of&amp;amp;nbsp;new&amp;amp;nbsp;editions&amp;amp;nbsp;of her novels&amp;amp;nbsp;and&amp;amp;nbsp;numerous&amp;amp;nbsp;new&amp;amp;nbsp;film&amp;amp;nbsp;adaptations&amp;amp;nbsp;in production.&amp;amp;nbsp;But what does it mean to read and edit Jane Austen today through the lens of colonialism, cartography, and race?&amp;amp;nbsp;Scholar Patricia&amp;amp;nbsp;A.&amp;amp;nbsp;Matthew, who&amp;amp;nbsp;recently&amp;amp;nbsp;edited&amp;amp;nbsp;new editions of&amp;amp;nbsp;three&amp;amp;nbsp;Austen&amp;amp;nbsp;novels,&amp;amp;nbsp;joins us to explore the&amp;amp;nbsp;ongoing&amp;amp;nbsp;fascination with&amp;amp;nbsp;Jane&amp;amp;nbsp;and&amp;amp;nbsp;share&amp;amp;nbsp;new research about&amp;amp;nbsp;the Regency era.&amp;amp;nbsp;How wealth from Caribbean sugar plantations and slavery shaped the world depicted in Austen’s&amp;amp;nbsp;novels—and how today’s readers can confront the economic and imperial histories embedded in Regency-era fiction.&amp;amp;nbsp; During her fellowship at the Folger Shakespeare Library, Patricia Matthew examined archival materials, including legal texts, maps, travel logs, and legal documents, to gain a better understanding of colonial sugar plantations in the Caribbean. She looked at&amp;amp;nbsp;how&amp;amp;nbsp;empire and enslavement&amp;amp;nbsp;wealth&amp;amp;nbsp;from the new world,&amp;amp;nbsp;slavery, and&amp;amp;nbsp;race&amp;amp;nbsp;informed&amp;amp;nbsp;(or didn’t)&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp;the literature&amp;amp;nbsp;and visual culture&amp;amp;nbsp;of&amp;amp;nbsp;the&amp;amp;nbsp;18th–&amp;amp;nbsp;and 19th–century Britainies. This research&amp;amp;nbsp;now shapes Matthew Patricia’s&amp;amp;nbsp;new annotated editions of&amp;amp;nbsp;Pride and Prejudice,&amp;amp;nbsp;Northanger Abbey, and&amp;amp;nbsp;Mansfield Park, and opens up broader conversations about adaptation, nostalgia, and canon formation.&amp;amp;nbsp;  From overlooked maps folded into rare archival books to questions of literary escapism and cultural memory, Patricia offers a rich and expansive perspective on Jane Austen, her era, and her legacy in 2025.&amp;amp;nbsp;       &amp;amp;gt;&amp;amp;gt; Pre-order Patricia Matthew’s new editions of&amp;amp;nbsp;Pride and Prejudice,&amp;amp;nbsp;Northanger Abbey&amp;amp;nbsp;from Penguin Classics, and&amp;amp;nbsp;Mansfield Park from Norton Library.&amp;amp;nbsp; From the&amp;amp;nbsp;Shakespeare Unlimited&amp;amp;nbsp;podcast. Published August 11, 2025. © Folger Shakespeare Library. All rights reserved. This episode was produced by Matt Frassica. Garland Scott is the executive producer. It was edited by Gail Kern Paster. We had help with web production from Paola García Acuña. Leonor Fernandez edits our transcripts. Final mixing services are provided by Clean Cuts at Three Seas, Inc. Patricia A. Matthew&amp;amp;nbsp;is Associate Professor of English at Montclair State University, where she teaches courses on the History of the Novel and Romantic abolitionist culture.&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp;She writes about Regency-era literature and culture for scholars and the public in journals and publications including Texas Studies in Literature and Language, Women’s Writing, Lapham’s Quarterly, The Times Literary Supplement, and Slate. She co-edits the Oxford University Press book series Race in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture. She is also director of the Race and Regency Lab and editor of Penguin Random House’s 250th anniversary editions of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice and Northanger Abbey.&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp;Winner of fellowships from the National Humanities Center and the British Association for Romanticism Studies, she is currently&amp;amp;nbsp;writing&amp;amp;nbsp;a book about abolition, material culture, and gender for Princeton University Press. She lives in Brooklyn, New York.&amp;amp;nbsp;    </description>
  <author_name>Folger Shakespeare Library: Shakespeare Unlimited</author_name>
  <author_url>http://www.folger.edu/shakespeare-unlimited</author_url>
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