Ever wondered what it would be like to learn to write from one of English literatureâs greatest novelists?
This winter, the 16 students in the first-year seminar âReading Jane Austenââtaught by Carolyn Dever, a professor in the âhave been discovering the next-best thing. Theyâve spent the term immersed in the worlds of Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, Emma, and Persuasionâreading the novels, viewing film adaptations, and writing, writing, writing.
have long been a fixture of Dartmouthâs writing curriculum, administered through the . The small, intensive courses, offered across disciplines, give students an opportunity to delve deeply into a subject they care about early in their undergraduate experience while developing their skills in written academic discourse.
Why a first-year seminar on Austen? âAusten is one of the great novelists of the British literary tradition, and students can learn a lot both about writing and about literature very rapidly through an experience of immersion in Austenâs work,â says Dever.
Alexandra Rossillo â21, a member of Allen House, says learning to write with Jane Austen as a model is âchallenging. You feel like you have to do her justice in your papers.â
But, she says, she can already see the improvement in her own writing. âWeâre reading constantly, and analyzing what she wrote constantly, and then we do peer edits and we rewrite and we do drafts over and over and over again, so weâre always improving, every single time.â
Ashleigh Brady â21, also a member of Allen House, says she had never read Austen before this class. âSheâs hyped up a lot, so I thought I should probably get Jane Austen under my belt.â
She hasnât been disappointed. âPride and Prejudice was by far my favorite book that Iâve read in the past three years,â she says. âProfessor Dever loves Jane Austenâs books, so that enthusiasm rubs off on us. And she really wants us to learn how to write well.â
In addition to reading and writing, the class has taken advantage of Dartmouth Libraryâs . On a recent afternoon, the students meet there in a small classroom eager to examine a variety of books related to Austen, including first editions of three of the novels.
But first, , the head of special collections, asks them to compare two more-modern books: a 1953 Ace Paperback edition of Junkie: Confessions of an Unredeemed Drug Addict, by William Lee, and a Penguin Classic â50th anniversary definitive editionâ of William Burroughsâ Junky, complete with scholarly introduction, glossary, and multiple appendices by luminaries like Beat poet Allen Ginsberg.
The first book, the class decides, is pulp fictionââguilty-pleasure readingââwhile the second is serious literature.

But they are the same book, Satterfield tells the classâthe first edition published under a pseudonym when Burroughs was unknown, the second long after he was the famous author of Naked Lunch. How a book is published changes how readers approach it, Satterfield says, including books, like Austenâs, that are now judged as classics.
âYou all signed up for this class because you thought, Jane Austenâawesome, right?â Satterfield says. âThereâs an aura about her, youâre reading editions that have notes and explanations to them. But when somebody read Jane Austen in 1811 or 1812, they did not read that. They read a popular novel of the day.â
That lesson in mind, the students explore the books on the tables: editions of the novels from across three centuries; theatrical adaptions (including one by Winnie-the-Pooh author A.A. Milne) and study guides; and self-help books on family health and ladiesâ comportment published around the time Austen was writing, in the early 19th century.
âOur table was centered around women and how they should act,â Brady reports to the group. One book castigates âpromiscuousâ women from around the world; another âis about the conduct of wives, and a bunch of traits that women should strive to have.â
âIt really goes with EmmaâEmma taking Harriet under her wing and making her more of a high-class woman,â Brady says. âIt shows that men and even women at that time had very misogynistic viewpoints on how very strictly women should act and how you should behave.â
The students learn why Austenâs novels were originally published in three-volume editions (a profitable format for the subscription libraries of the time, which were major book buyers), and speculate about why the first-edition title pages attribute authorship to âa Lady,â instead of naming Jane Austen.
Rossillo calls the opportunity to explore the Rauner collection âone of the coolest things ever. I have a different edition than the Penguin, so thatâs already different from everyone else in my class, and then seeing all of these different editionsâit just shows you how different people value the books and how it changes over time.â
âBooks have historiesâthey are histories,â says Dever. âNothing brings history more to life for students than the opportunity to put their hands on the original materials themselves.â
Dever, who left her role as provost in November to return full-time to teaching and research, describes working with her class as âfabulous.â
âThereâs nothing better. I love to work with students. I love to be there when theyâre making discoveries,â she says. âIâm passionately interested in the things that I have the chance to teach, so to bring them into the circle of engagement is a privilege.â
Hannah Silverstein can be reached at hannah.silverstein@dartmouth.edu.


