This is what I've been reading about this afternoon. I'm not working on any lecture about Austen in this period, I'm teaching other authors from other literary periods. It was just out of curiosity.
The first paper I found is by Robert Miles, Chair of the Department of English at the University of Victoria, Canada. His lecture/paper available online, Jane Austen, Happiness and Moral Luck aims at arguing that Austen’s capacity to make her readers happy is a key datum in understanding Austen’s place in modernity. Traditionally Jane Austen has been thought of as an Augustan writer. For recent critics, to revise Austen as ‘Romantic’ has generally meant rescuing her from the Janeites with their insistence upon the novels as ‘hetero-normative’ fairytales of domestic bliss. In this lecture Robert Miles sides with the Janeites, instead, and Charles Taylor’s recent, revisionary account of secularization, in A Secular Age, provides the critical framework for his reading of Austen.
It was Jane Austen who first represented the specifically modern personality and the culture in which it had its being. Never before had the moral life been shown as she shows it to be, never before had it been conceived to be so complex and difficult and exhausting. Hegel speaks of the “secularization of spirituality” as a prime characteristic of the modern epoch, and Jane Austen is the first to tell us what this involves. (from Lionel Trilling’s Sincerity and Authenticity ,Oxford University Press 1973, p. 308 )
By assessing what was original in Jane Austen's fictional technique in the context of the history of the novel, Robert Miles takes a fresh look at how Austen came to be constructed as a model of Englishness. For many readers Jane Austen is the quintessential English author. Jane Austen sets out to explore the history of this identification with Englishness in the context of a tradition of criticism that has frequently tried to achieve the reverse: to establish her difference, and distance, from 'us'. Rather than simply showing how Austen differs from the heritage, Jane Austen argues that many of the reasons for her construction as an English cultural icon are to found in the works formal qualities, and often in her most innovative techniques. Another interesting contribution to the discussion about Austen and the theme of happiness comes from Claire Eileen Tarlson , Seattle University , Washington. Her article is Jane Austen, Persuasion, and the Pursuit of Happiness ( Lethbridge Undergraduate Research Journal. 2006. Volume 1 Number 1).
If you are interested in reading these papers, you can find them in pdf format online:
1. Jane Austen, Happiness and Moral Luck 2. Jane Austen, Persuasion and The Pursuit of Happiness