1media/image78_thumb.jpg2021-09-02T09:46:19-07:00Grant Glass107afcf8873f422898a9c2e07c49ae3f625fc644373541Chavez, Kristen. “The power of adaptation.” in “Articles.” Website. Aug. 5, 2019. College of Arts and Sciences, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, https://college.unc.edu/2019/08/jasp-2019/.plain2021-09-02T09:46:19-07:00Grant Glass107afcf8873f422898a9c2e07c49ae3f625fc644
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1media/image87.jpg2021-08-26T13:21:42-07:002013 - Jane Austen Summer Program Inaugurated3English and Comparative Literature Professors Inger Brody and James Thompson co-found the Jane Austen Summer Program in 2013. Held on the UNC campus, the Jane Austen Summer Program annually focuses on one of Austen’s works and the English Regency period. The award-winning four-day symposium features speakers, film screenings, small-discussion groups, a theatrical, and a Regency ball.plain2021-09-02T09:46:33-07:0001/01/2013English and Comparative Literature Professors Inger Brody and James Thompson co-found the Jane Austen Summer Program in 2013. Held on the UNC campus, the Jane Austen Summer Program annually focuses on one of Austen’s works and the English Regency period. The four-day symposium features speakers, film screenings, small-discussion groups, a theatrical, and a Regency ball. The program draws participants from around the world, and has been awarded the North Carolina Humanities Council’s Joel Gradin Award for Excellence in Public Humanities. In partnership with the National Humanities Center, a post-symposium teachers’ initiative encourages middle and high school teachers to use online tools for projects that introduce students to Austen and her works.