Diana Birchall posted the following link to her mathematician cousin Davis’s review of Michael’s book:
However,
I am sorry to say that I found his review very wrong headed in several
important ways, which I’ve been prompted to articulate, because it goes to the
heart of the prevailing mythology about Jane Austen’s limitations as an author.
Davis:
“To the best of my knowledge, this is the only mention of a mathematician in any
of Austen's works. It is safe to say that it never crossed Austen's mind that
any form of mathematics would be at all helpful in understanding her novels,
still less that her novels would be a significant contribution to mathematics.”
That
already marks the reviewer as someone who has grossly underestimated Jane
Austen, and who lacks the background knowledge to realize how wrong his
instincts are, from the getgo. Even beyond Michael’s game theory insights, this
post will articulate some of the reasons I believe JA’s fiction has strong mathematical
logical resonance.
First,
I find a subtle Lewis Carroll-like quality to JA’s writing, especially in Emma, in which I get a particularly
strong sense of a powerful theoretical mind playing profound games with her
readers. JA was very consciously creating allegorical structures in which the
surface story provides an absurdist almost trivialist mask for deeper (philosophical
and mathematical, among other) concerns. Even if JA was not, like Carroll, officially
a mathematician and logician, she learned what she needed to learn somehow,
some way, and invented the rest out of her huge intellect and imagination—the ultimate
autodidact.
In a
nutshell, I see Lewis Carroll having read Emma,
in particular the charades and Harriet’s tale of the gypsies, and his having been
inspired to do something similar in the conversations between Alice and her
acquaintances on the other side of the looking glass. Harriet herself is a
character straight out of Wonderland --superficially speaking absurdities, but
concealing deep games underneath. The ultimate sort of irony.
But
there’s more mathematical stuff that comes to mind when I think about Emma in particular. For example, in the
following post 3 ½ years ago….
…I responded
to Anielka’s sharp observations about the mathematical precision and complexity
hidden in the line by line structure of the “courtship” charade, even beyond
its numerous alternate solutions, and I responded to her point with further
points about the analogy of the quadrille-like
charade structure to the quadrille in both
dance and in international relations (the latter being, of course and not coincidentally, a prime arena
of study for game theorists!).
And there’s
one more example I wish to present, perhaps the most mathematically elegant. I pointed
out here…
…a
layered insight which I have been speaking about in my Jane Fairfax talks since mid 2007. I.e., there is a strikingly logico-mathematical
“nesting” (like those Russian Matryoshka dolls within dolls) of the mysteries
of Emma, hidden in the mathematical
structure of the novel, with its reversals. Good Harriet and Bad Harriet; Good
Frank and Bad Frank; Good Knightley and (gasp!)
Bad Knightley. Matter and anti-matter, anyone?
But,
more mathematical still, was my realization that Mrs. Elton’s acrostic is Mr. Elton’s charade, that Frank is
Mrs. Elton’s “abominable puppy”, that John Knightley is Emma’s “Mr. Dixon”, etc
etc. What we have is nothing less than interpersonal relations depicted as
algebraic equations, with characters as “unknowns” to be “solved”! I hadn’t
even consciously realized that I was using algebraic terminology when I wrote
the following teaser sheet for my 2010 JASNA talk in NYC:
I.e.,
I suspect that Jane Austen thought of herself as a player in that field, and
that is why she puts that seemingly
offhand comment about mathematicians and grammarians in Emma’s mind—as in JA’s
letters to James Stanier Clarke, it’s the offhand on the surface that is the
onhand under the surface.
“By
contrast, few of Austen's characters engage in sustained planning or plotting
of any complexity.”
Diana,
your cousin must not be reading the same novels I have read—I see nothing but “sustained
plotting” of extremely intricate complexity in every one of JA’s novels. He seems
to be reading the novels, especially Emma, at their most literal, superficial
level, without reading suspiciously at all, taking Knightley, e.g., as the
ultimate reality test. That’s Emma
according to Emma, not according to Jane Austen.
“Second,
and more seriously, Chwe suggests tentatively that the elopement of Elizabeth
Bennet's sister Lydia might be an instance of successful strategic planning on
Lydia's part. This reading is absolutely impossible.”
Davis
shows by this comment a total cluelessness that characters like Lydia might
possibly have motives and understandings of which the clueless heroine (in this case, Lizzy) is utterly unaware.
What
is missing in the review is any awareness that the most important strategic,
disingenuous deployment of game theory expertise in Jane Austen’s novels is
that which is performed by Jane Austen on her readers! I.e., Jane Austen, in a
thousand places, strategically
manipulates her readers’ awareness and understanding of what is going in the
story, while at the same time playing fair by giving enough subtle hints and
clues as to what might be going on offstage.
“Beyond
these specific errors lies a more general and pervasive misunderstanding. In
the final analysis, Austen places much more value on ethical behavior than on
strategic planning.”
That
has to be the biggest begging of an important question about Jane Austen that I’ve
ever read! In a single sentence, Davis has inadvertently shown that he has
drunk the interpretive Kool—Aid that JA has so cleverly offered. He believes
the cover stories that JA’s characters tell.
Jane
Austen’s realism is above all about the way people rationalize their immoral or
strategic behavior. I bet your cousin thinks Sir Thomas Bertram is a good man,
and not the heartless, hypocritical, sadistic, mercenary, greedy moral monster
that he is. And he obviously thinks Knightley is the fount of all wisdom. He
doesn’t realize that JA has led him through the looking glass, and has given
him what he wants, a world in which the “good guys” like Knightley say what
they mean, know themselves well, and behave strictly according to the high
moral precepts they preach.
W.H.
Auden would be rolling at more rotations per second than Rafael Nadal’s nastiest
forehand to hear such opinions about Jane Austen. Auden understood as well as anyone
that this is a fantasy world, having no resemblance to the domestic
Machiavellianism actually depicted by Jane Austen, which is much closer to real
life.
So
above all, JA’s novels are ways of teaching strategic thinking experientially,
not by means of dry lecture of “facts” about it, but by throwing the reader
into deep water, and letting them learn to swim. The “currents” JA creates push
the reader out to sea, but a strong reader can learn to avoid those currents and get to shore, where the
jewels from the deep left behind by JA have all washed up.
Cheers, ARNIE
@JaneAustenCode
on Twitter
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