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Deirdre Le Faye





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Deirdre Le Faye (26 October 1933 – 16 August 2020) was an English writer and literary critic.

Biography

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Deirdre was born in Bournemouth and raised in Farnborough and Reading, during the bombing raids of the Second World War. After her father died of illness, she left school at 16 and began a secretarial course as a scholarship student.[1] She began work as an administrative assistant for the Department of Medieval & Later Antiquities at the British Museum.[2]

It was while working there that she began to join archaeological digs on weekends and holidays, as a way to take inexpensive vacations. She became a member of the Camden History Society and began to research graves and inscriptions. An interest in Jane Austen was rekindled, which led to her making contact with Austen family descendants living near Winchester. Using papers in the attic of these Austen-Leigh heirs, over the course of five years of weekends, while working full time at the British Museum, she updated and rewrote Jane Austen: A Family Record (1989). It was expanded, revised, and republished as A Family Record (2003), a factual biography of Austen.

She updated R. W. Chapman's published collection of Jane Austen's letters twice, in 1995 and 2011. She completed the massive A Chronology of Jane Austen and her Family, 1600-2000, as well as a cookbook, an edition of Austen's cousin's letters (Jane Austen’s ‘Outlandish Cousin’: the Life and Letters of Eliza de Feuillide), for a total of 12 monographs and edited books. She also published more than 90 articles between 1975 and 2020, many of them in The Jane Austen Society Report and Notes and Queries. She was a recipient of the Royal Society of Literature's Benson Medal in 2014. She was a member of the editorial board for Cambridge University Press's eight-volume edition of Jane Austen's novels and other manuscripts, 2005–8. She received an honorary DLitt from Southampton University in 2011.

Le Faye died on 16 August 2020, at the age of 86.[3]

Works

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References

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  1. ^ "A Tribute to Deirdre Le Faye". Chawton House. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  • ^ "Deirdre Le Faye". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 27 September 2016.
  • ^ Caines, Michael (28 August 2020). "Deidre Le Faye obituary". The Guardian.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Deirdre_Le_Faye&oldid=1193989942"
     



    Last edited on 6 January 2024, at 17:17  





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    This page was last edited on 6 January 2024, at 17:17 (UTC).

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