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Faith, Science, Joy, and Jane Austen

Faith, Science, Joy, and Jane Austen

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Category: Pride and Prejudice

Christian Austen Variations 7: Happy Endings for Charlotte Lucas by Laura Hile and Amanda Kai

July 2, 2020September 12, 2020 ~ Brenda S Cox ~ 3 Comments

In sequels to Pride and Prejudice, Laura Hile and Amanda Kai give Charlotte Lucas very different happy endings.

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Christian Jane Austen Variations 6: Barbara Cornthwaite and Lara S. Ormiston

April 4, 2019September 12, 2020 ~ Brenda S Cox ~ 2 Comments

More enthralling Austen variations with a faith foundation. What was Mr. Knightley's perspective in Emma? And, what if Darcy and Elizabeth got engaged after the first proposal?

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Christian Jane Austen Variations 5: Robin Helm and A Very Austen Valentine

March 28, 2019September 12, 2020 ~ Brenda S Cox ~ 4 Comments

More delightful Jane Austen Variations, with a faith foundation. What if Darcy's first comment about Elizabeth was that she was overweight? Could he come to realize that there was "more of her to love"? And, an anthology of very creative Valentine's variations.

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How Austen’s Characters Respond to Stress

December 27, 2018December 27, 2018 ~ Brenda S Cox ~ Leave a comment

Jane Austen's characters show us different ways to deal with stress, both helpful and unhelpful.

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Science Variations 3: Novels with Regency and Victorian Science

December 12, 2018September 12, 2020 ~ Brenda S Cox ~ Leave a comment

Some fun novels of science in the Regency, and two novels of the Industrial Revolution: North and South, and a variation: Nowhere but North.

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Jane Austen Variations With Science 2: Abigail Reynolds

December 5, 2018September 12, 2020 ~ Brenda S Cox ~ 2 Comments

Two irresistible, romantic Pride and Prejudice variations highlight the Industrial Revolution and the problems of Regency society.

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Christian Jane Austen Variations 4: Laura Hile

November 29, 2018September 12, 2020 ~ Brenda S Cox ~ 2 Comments

Two delightful Austen variations with faith themes--one reverses Darcy and Collins, and the other continues the story of Elizabeth Elliot from Persuasion.

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A Change of Heart

September 28, 2018December 24, 2018 ~ Brenda S Cox ~ Leave a comment

The real climax of each Jane Austen novel is when someone reaches a turning point, and sees the darkness in his or her own heart.

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Christian Jane Austen Variations 3: Pamela Aidan

August 2, 2018September 12, 2020 ~ Brenda S Cox ~ 8 Comments

Pamela Aidan's delightful series on Darcy's experiences in Pride and Prejudice weaves Christian faith and Evangelicalism into the story.

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Christian Jane Austen Variations 2: Jeanna Ellsworth, Kelsey Bryant, Janine Mendenhall

May 10, 2018September 12, 2020 ~ Brenda S Cox ~ 4 Comments

More great, Christian, Jane Austen variations!

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“Finally! Fashionable Goodness is the Jane Austen reference book that’s been missing from the bookshelves of every Austen fan and scholar.” ~ Rachel Dodge, bestselling author of Praying with Jane

Fashionable Goodness: Christianity in Jane Austen's England is now available on Amazon in paperback and Kindle! Other ebook formats are also available; check your provider. You can also find it at Jane Austen Books, which carries an amazing range of books related to Austen. Retailers and libraries can obtain Fashionable Goodness through Ingram iPage.

Jane Austen transports us to a world of elegance and upheaval. The Church of England, at the heart of her life and her world, is key to understanding her stories. Readers may wonder:

  • Why could Mr. Collins, a rector, afford to marry a poor woman, while Mr. Elton, a vicar, could not? 
  • What conflicting religious duties led Elizabeth Bennet to turn down two marriage proposals?
  • Why did Mansfield Park’s early readers (unlike most today) love Fanny Price?
  • What part did people of color, like Miss Lambe of Sanditon, play in English society?
  • How did Austen’s church impact people’s lives and the world?

Fashionable Goodness: Christianity in Jane Austen’s England answers these questions and many more. It explores:

  • Austen’s Church of England, as we see it in her novels, 
  • Challenges the church was facing, reflected in her stories, and 
  • Ways the church in Austen’s England transformed England and the world.

Comprehensive, yet affordable and easy to read, Fashionable Goodness will help you see Austen’s beloved novels and characters in richer and deeper ways. 

Recommendations:

“You will look at Mr. Collins, the Crawfords, the Dashwoods, the Tilneys, the Wickhams, and Willoughbys--and especially Fanny Price!--with new and surprising insights. Bravo to Brenda Cox for giving us this very accessible, illuminating take on the ‘fashionable goodness’ of Austen’s era!” ~ Deborah Barnum, Jane Austen in Vermont

“Brenda Cox’s Fashionable Goodness: Christianity in Jane Austen’s England is an indispensable guide to all things religious in Jane Austen’s world.” ~ Roger E. Moore, Vanderbilt University, author of Jane Austen and the Reformation

“This scholarly, detailed work is a triumph. Easily read, helpful and accurate, it provides a fascinating panorama of 18th century Anglicanism and the various challenges the Church and wider society faced. Cox’s many insights will enrich readers’ understanding and appreciation of Jane Austen’s novels and her life as a devout Christian.” ~ The Revd. Canon Michael Kenning, vice-chairman of the Jane Austen Society (U. K.) and former rector of Steventon

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Brenda S. Cox

Brenda S. Cox is a writer, an admirer of  Jane Austen, and a Christian with an engineering background.  This blog explores connections between science, Christian faith, church music, and Jane Austen’s world. Brenda also shares her personal reflections and search for joy.

Brenda would love to hear from you! Please make comments and ask questions. If you want to comment on a post from the home page, please click on “Leave a Comment” just under the featured picture at the top of the post, and a box will appear at the bottom. If you are on the page for the post, scroll all the way down. Feel free to ask any question you have about Austen, faith, and/or science as a comment on any post.

Any ads that appear on this site are from WordPress, not from Brenda.

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abbey anglican Bath Bible book of common prayer Brenda S. Cox Christian christianity christmas church church of england clergy dashwood embroidery Faith Science Joy and Jane Austen fanny price Jane Austen Joy novels parson Regency religion sampler tithes words

Categories

  • Astronomy (4)
  • Austen variations (21)
  • Austen's Novels (19)
  • Biographies (13)
  • Biology (4)
  • Bonus Material Fashionable Goodness (6)
  • Books on Austen and Christianity (8)
  • Chemistry (1)
  • Children's books (3)
  • Church and Clergy in Austen's England (32)
  • Countess of Huntingdon's Chapel Services (1)
  • Cultural Universals (1)
  • Devotionals (8)
  • Emma (8)
  • Faith (104)
  • Faith and Science (7)
  • Faith Words (5)
  • Family Sermons (1)
  • Fashionable Goodness: Christianity in Jane Austen's England (2)
  • Geology (2)
  • Inventions (5)
  • Joy (23)
  • Mansfield Park (15)
  • Medicine and Health (6)
  • Morning and Evening Prayer (1)
  • Movies (2)
  • Music and Art (24)
  • Northanger Abbey (9)
  • Paleontology (3)
  • Persuasion (15)
  • Prayers of Jane Austen (2)
  • Pride and Prejudice (24)
  • Psychology (6)
  • Reflections (9)
  • Reviews (28)
  • Sanditon (2)
  • Science (17)
  • Sense and Sensibility (13)
  • Sewing and Embroidery (8)
  • Southey Letters (1)
  • The Watsons (1)
  • Travel (9)
  • Whately Review (1)
  • Women of Science (4)

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Blogroll

  • Austen and Evangelicals
  • Christian Messages of Mansfield Park
  • Christian Virtues and Morality in Austen's Novels
  • Church in Austen's London
  • Churches, Chapels,… in Northanger Abbey
  • Clergymen in Jane Austen's Novels
  • Death and Second Chances in Austen's Novels
  • Emma's Anglican Wedding
  • Faith Words in Sense and Sensibility: A Story of Selfishness and Self-Denial
  • Fanny Price as Fordyce's Ideal Woman
  • God in the Regency
  • Going to Church in Austen's England
  • Henry Tilney and Sydney Smith
  • Henry Tilney's Diligence and "Avoiding the Horror of the Absent Clergyman"
  • Jane Austen Centre Online Magazine
  • Jane Austen's Prayers
  • Jane Austen's World
  • Jane Austen, Virtue, and the Pursuit of Happiness
  • Jane Austen–Great Christian Novelist (Jerram Barr)
  • Leaders in Science and Industry
  • Maria Grace: Random Bits of Fascination
  • Marianne Dashwood's Repentance in Sense and Sensibility
  • Rachel Dodge (Praying With Jane)
  • Reading Fordyce's Sermons With Pride and Prejudice
  • Reading Jane Austen (Karen Swallow Prior, video)
  • Regency History
  • Satirical Cartoons and Austen's Church of England
  • Science in Austen's London
  • The Christianity of Jane Austen's Novels
  • Tithes and the Rural Clergyman
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