Emma Adapted: Jane Austen's Heroine from Book to Film

Front Cover
Peter Lang, 2007 - Foreign Language Study - 190 pages
This work of literary and film criticism examines all eight filmed adaptations of Jane Austen's Emma produced between 1948 and 1996 as vastly different interpretations of the source novel. Instead of condemning the movies and television specials as being «not as good as the book, » Marc DiPaolo considers how each adaptation might be understood as a valid «reading» of Austen's text. For example, he demonstrates how the Gwyneth Paltrow film Emma is both a romance and a female coming-of-age story, the 1972 BBC miniseries dramatizes Emma's world as claustrophobic and Emma herself as suffering from depression, and the modern-day teen comedy Clueless comes closest of all to bringing a feminist reading of the novel to the screen. Each version illuminates a different, legitimate way of reading the novel that is rewarding for Austen fans, scholars, and students alike.
 

Contents

Chapter One Austen and Adaptation
5
Chapter Two Emma and Literary Scholarship
21
Chapter Three The Early Television Versions 19481972
39
Chapter Four EMMA A D 1996
85
Emma Woodhouse
125
Chapter Six Overview
141
Notes
153
Adaptation Reference Guide
177
Bibliography
183
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About the author (2007)

The Author: Marc DiPaolo, Assistant Professor of Communications and English at Alvernia College, is a narratologist and specialist in British and American Romanticism. He is an editor of the literature anthology The Conscious Reader, and has contributed chapters to the forthcoming books A Century of the Marx Brothers and The Amazing Transforming Superhero. He earned his doctorate in English from Drew University.