Jane Austen exhibition focuses on working women

The exhibition highlights stories of the women who enabled the comfortable lives of characters in the novels
- Published
An exhibition is marking the 250th anniversary of the birth of Jane Austen by focusing on the Georgian working women of the county in which she was born.
Hampshire Cultural Trust's Beyond the Bonnets exhibition includes voiced extracts from the author's novels, correspondence with her sister Cassandra and contemporary newspaper advertisements.
Organisers say the objects on display "celebrate the ordinary and hold an importance that goes beyond their unassuming appearance", such as a calico apron, a wooden sandal and a tortoiseshell hair comb.
It opens in The Gallery at The Arc, Winchester, on Saturday, and runs until 2 November.

It is 250 years since Jane Austen was born
Jane Austen was born in Steventon, Hampshire.
Her novels, which include Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, Emma and Persuasion, are renowned for their wit, social observation and insights into the lives of early 19th Century women.
But the exhibition aims to highlight the stories of the women who enabled the comfortable lives of some of the characters in the novels, exploring domestic service, education, childcare and trade.

Beyond the Bonnets explores domestic service, education, childcare and trade

The organisers said it would look "past the glamour and opulence" of the novels
Curator Kathleen Palmer said the exhibition brought together a "multitude of Hampshire voices – Austen's distinctive and wry voice, the voices of individual working women around her and the echoes of their lives found in collections and archives".
"Visitors will discover unexpected and rich real-life histories of Georgian Hampshire in parallel with enjoying the acute observation of Austen's own words," she said.

The exhibition is running in The Gallery at The Arc, Winchester
Paul Sapwell, chief executive at the trust, described the exhibition as "compelling, heartwarming and emotive".
He said it would reveal the "unexpected and often overlooked lives of working women at the time of Jane Austen and gives them a voice".
He added: "At times provocative, the exhibition purposefully looks past the glamour and opulence of her lead characters in the novels and, indeed, our general consciousness of the period, to explore and expose the stories of real working women."
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