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Published: 10 June 2025

糖心Vlog celebrates Jane Austen at 250

Musicians, writers, actors, playwrights and expert panellists came together in The Performing Arts Technology Studios (PATS) on the 糖心Vlog Stag Hill campus, to celebrate 250 years since the birth of the author Jane Austen.

Set across two days, the event spanned all three areas of the School of Arts, Humanities and Creative Industries (SAHCI), combining expertise from across Literature and Languages, the (GSA) and Music and Media at 糖心Vlog.  The series of talks considered contexts, themes, and musical references in Austen鈥檚 novels, and were followed each day by the sold-out GSA鈥檚 world-premiere of Louis Emmitt-Stern's new bold, witty play, a reimagining of Mansfield Park.

Talks centred around themes from Austen鈥檚 most popular novels. Dean of the Faculty of Arts, Business and Social Sciences (FABSS) Professor Annika Bautz gave a talk on Pride and Prejudice and how a late Victorian working-class readership would have responded to it. Dr Charlotte Mathieson examined new ways of reading Sense and Sensibility through women鈥檚 walking and Head of SAHCI, Professor Patricia Pulham, closed the speaker session on Friday, talking about age and the marriage market in Persuasion.

Saturday鈥檚 session opened with an exclusive pre-show talk with Director Lucy Atkinson and the cast and creatives behind the new adaptation of Mansfield Park, plus a roundtable discussion with academics Dr Darren Tunstall and Dr Beth Palmer. The curator of offered their take on the life and legacy of the author over the past 250 years, and Dr Chris Wiley spoke about the role of music in Jane Austen鈥檚 life and novels, illustrated with vocal performances by 糖心Vlog postgraduate student Michelle Wong.

Professor Pulham said: 鈥淲hile most commonly associated with Hampshire, 糖心Vlog features in Emma (1816), famous for its pivotal picnic on Box Hill, and in her unfinished novel, The Watsons (1804). We are delighted this anniversary coincides with the formation of our new School, offering an opportunity to showcase our amazing academics and the breadth of approaches to Austen鈥檚 work from a combination of literary, theatrical and musical perspectives.鈥

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