This course introduces learners to Jane Austen’s early writings, known as the juvenilia, and explores how these lively, comic and often surprising texts help us understand Austen’s later achievement as a novelist. Across four weeks, students will examine Austen’s experiments with parody, sensibility, Gothic fiction, theatricality, narrative voice and social satire. The course shows that the young Austen was already a sharp, playful and highly self-aware writer, testing the limits of literary convention long before the publication of her major novels. Learners will also consider how the juvenilia connect to Austen’s mature fiction and to her wider literary legacy. No previous specialist knowledge is required, only an interest in Austen, literature and the pleasure of reading
The Other Austen. Jane Austen's Early Writings
Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (Autonomous University of Barcelona) via Coursera
Overview
Syllabus
- Presentation and Module 1 (Austen Unbound: Why the Juvenilia Matter)
- This MOOC explores Jane Austen's youthful writings, works full of humour, parody, and exaggeration, to reveal a little-known side of the author. Ideal for students, teachers, and readers who want to rediscover Austen beyond the classic novels.
- Parody and Excess in the Juvenilia
- Exploration of sentimental parody, absurd plot devices and social satire in key early works.
- The Gothic and the Grotesque in Austen
- Analysis of works such as Henry and Eliza in relation to Gothic fiction, theatricality and transgressive storytelling.
- Style, Subversion and Literary Legacy
- Comparing Austen’s early fiction to her published novels to trace stylistic development and literary legacy.
Taught by
David Owen