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Works From a Major Indian Art Collection to Be Auctioned at Sotheby\'s

For more than a decade now Amrita Jhaveri has been quietly buying the best examples of modern and contemporary art from her native India. Ms. Jhaveri, a former Christie’s expert who is now a collector and writer, has decided to sell a portion of her collection at Sotheby’s in New York on March 19. It will be the first single-owner evening sale of Indian art held at Sotheby’s in more than a decade.

The auction will include 45 works that are together estimated to bring $5 million to $7 million. Proceeds from the sale will go to help fund a project space and lecture room at Khoj International Artists’ Association, an artist-run organization in New Delhi.

Among the highlights of the sale is an untitled painting by Tyeb Mehta from 1982, which is expected to sell for $800,000 to $1.2 million. Another canvas from the 1980s, “Rajasthan I,’’ by Sayed Haider Raza, which has been exhibited at the Phillips Collection in Washington in 1986, is estimted to bring between $600,000 and $800,000.

If Ms. Jhaveri’s name rings bells for those familiar with auction house history it is because, besides being a collector, she is also the wife of Christopher M. Davidge, the former chief executive of Christie’s.



Dolphin That Died in Canal Was \'Chronically Ill,\' Necropsy Shows

The dolphin that died in the polluted Gowanus Canal on Friday had underlying health problems, biologists said Monday.Richard Drew/Associated Press The dolphin that died in the polluted Gowanus Canal on Friday had underlying health problems, biologists said Monday.

The dolphin that died in the Gowanus Canal in Brooklyn on Friday had many health problems, including a damaged kidney and stomach ulcers, and appeared to have stopped eating, all indicators of chronic illness, the biologist who performed the necropsy said Monday night.

While the findings are preliminary and tissue tests still need to be done, the necropsy did not turn up evidence of any damage to the animalcaused by the canal’s Superfund-level contamination, said the biologist, Kimberly Durham.

The polluted water “didn’t help,” said Ms. Durham, rescue program director for the Riverhead Foundation. But she added, “I think the fate of this animal would have happened regardless or whether it was in the canal or anywhere else.”

The animal, an older adult male common dolphin seven feet long, turned up in the filthy headwaters of the canal, more than a mile from the harbor, on Friday morning, and struggled for much of the day.

The Riverhead Foundation, the region’s official marine-mammal rescue group, chose to wait for evening high tide to see if the dolphin returned to the harbor under its own power rather than try to capture the animal, a decision widely second-guessed by lay observers. The dolphin died in the canal about an hour befor! e evening high tide.

The necropsy, performed Sunday, turned up kidney stones, liver parasites, stomach ulcers and an empty gastrointestinal tract, adding up to a “chronically ill animal,” Ms. Durham said.

“I think you might have a situation where you have all of these things put together,” she said. The stomach ulcer was big enough that it had to have taken a while to form, she said. “The dolphin was thin and hadn’t been feeding, and this in itself can lead to an animal’s death. They stop eating and get dehydrated and they get renal failure - it can lead to a whole chain reaction.”

“Anytime I see something associated with a marine mammal’s kidneys,” she added, “that’s something that could be in itself the sole reason why the animal succumbs.”

With regard to the canal’s waters, Ms. Durham said that fish, which breathe water through their gills, are much more quickly affected by water quality than dolphins, which do not ingest water directly (they get ther water from the food they eat). Damage from the polluted water would have taken the form of skin lesions or similar injuries, she said, and there was no sign of anything like that.

“All I can tell you is that this animal was in poor health,” Ms. Durham said. She added that she expects a histopathologist’s report to yield more detailed findings and possibly - but not definitely - a specific cause of death.



In \'Occupy,\' Well-Educated Professionals Far Outnumbered Jobless, Study Finds

Occupy Wall Street protesters in Midtown Manhattan on May 1, 2012.Ozier Muhammad/The New York Times Occupy Wall Street protesters in Midtown Manhattan on May 1, 2012.

More than a third of the people who participated in Occupy Wall Street protests in New York lived in households with annual incomes of $100,000 or more, according to a study by sociologists at the City University of New York, and more than two-thirds had professional jobs.

At the same time, the researchers found, nearly a third of the protesters had been laid off or lost a job, and a similar number said they had more than $1,000 in credit card or student loan debt.

The report, compiled by professors at the Joseph A. Murphy Institute for Worker Education and Labor Studies, looked at the ackgrounds and motivations of Occupy supporters as well as the impact of the movement. It was based on interviews with more than 700 people at a May Day rally in 2012.

Prof. Ruth Milkman, one of the study’s three authors, said that she and her colleagues, Prof. Stephanie Luce and Prof. Penny Lewis, became interested in examining the roots of Occupy Wall Street in the fall of 2011, when the movement took off. “It was the first major protest against the growth of inequality,” she said on Monday.

The research was financed the Russell Sage Foundation and assisted by about 50 graduate students, who spread through a crowd of several thousand that gathered at Union Square and then marched down Broadway on May 1, 2012.

Some of the study’s findings were unsurprising. Many participants in the movement had been involved in previous political demonstrations, and far from being spontaneous, the Occupy Wall Street protests were carefully planned.

But th! e study also suggested that many Occupy participants might have been more in the mainstream than some people might have guessed. Nearly 80 percent had at least a bachelor’s degree, the authors wrote, and about half of those with bachelor’s degrees had a graduate degree.

Despite the high level of education, the researchers found that a significant percentage of Occupy participants were underemployed, with nearly a quarter working fewer than 35 hours a week.

Professor Luce characterized the protesters who had problems finding full-time work as part of an emerging demographic that some commentators call the “precariat” â€" educated people forced into unsteady or insecure jobs because little else is available.

“These are the kids that did everything right,” she said. “They went to school, they graduated and then they faced this very problematic labor market.”



Do It Yourselves: Two Black Flag Reunions Set for Summer

Greg Ginn at Coachella in April.Damon Winter/The New York Times Greg Ginn at Coachella in April.

Greg Ginn, the guitarist and principal songwriter for the seminal Los Angeles punk band Black Flag, said he has resurrected the group with a new lineup and intends to put out an album and tour this summer.

Black Flag’s latest configuration will employ Ron Reyes as the lead singer and Gregory Moore on drums, Mr. Ginn announced. Mr. Reyes was the lead singer for the band for about a year in the late 1970s; Mr. Moore collaborated with Mr. Ginn in the 1980s in another band, Gone.

At the same time, another crew of Black Flag alumni have announced plans to tour under the nme Flag, Brooklyn Vegan reported. That band is led by Black Flag’s original lead singer, Keith Morris, and includes Chuck Dukowski, who was Black Flag’s bassist during its heyday, and Bill Stevenson, who played drums for the group in the mid-1980s. They will be joined by guitarist Stephen Egerton.

With Mr. Ginn and Mr. Morris both planning shows this summer, it means music fans face the possibility of dueling Black Flags.

Mr. Ginn’s Black Flag will make its first appearance at Hünxe, Germany on May 18. They also announced they will play the Hevy Fest in Britain in early August and then headline the Muddy Roots Festival in Tennessee at the end of the month.

Mr. Morris’s group is also slated to perform in Europe this summer and then will appear in Las Vegas on Memorial Day weekend.

Formed by Mr. Ginn in 1976 in Hermosa Beach, Black Flag pioneered! the California hardcore punk sound in the late 1970s with its do-it-yourself ethic, its driving beat and angry lyrics, and intensive low-budget touring. The group disbanded in 1986, though its members went on to other influential projects. Mr. Morris formed the Circle Jerks, and Mr. Ginn started a solo career.



Flu Forces Tegan and Sara to Reschedule Beacon Theater Shows

Illness has forced the Canadian duo Tegan and Sara to cancel shows at the Beacon Theater on Monday and Tuesday nights, a publicist for the group said.

The shows have been rescheduled for Feb. 19 and 20. Tickets to Monday’s show will be honored on the 19th, and Tuesday’s tickets will be accepted on the 20th.

Andrew Steinthal, a spokesman for Warner Brothers Records, said the indie-rock singers â€" the twin sisters Tegan and Sara Quinn â€" could not perform because Sara had contracted the flu and had lost her voice. The duo’s new album “Hearthrob,” on which they venture away from their rock roots into a lusher synth-pop sound, is slated for release on Tuesday.



Before Word Got Out, the Party\'s Over at a Brooklyn Speakeasy

Duke Riley, right, enjoyed the last night's festivities at a speakeasy in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, on Saturday.Kirsten Luce for The New York Times Duke Riley, right, enjoyed the last night’s festivities at a speakeasy in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, on Saturday.

The room at the corner of Greenpoint Avenue and Franklin Street in Brooklyn fell silent on Saturday night as several loud bangs were heard at the door. A latecomer to the party unfolding inside, Stephanie Han-yu, was on the phone and reported that three squad cars were on the street.

The police had apparently been alerted that the public gathering was dangerously over capacity. And it was also illegal - the room was home to Rotgut, a speakeasy that did not have a liquor license.

“Open the door!” someone, presumably an officer, shouted. “We can wait all night.” When a patron leaned toward a window to look out, a man behind the bar in a black fedora and a leopard-print sports jacket told him not to touch the drapes. A few more bangs were followed by an interminable period of tense near-silence. Finally, when guests walked out into the lobby and saw no police officers on the street, the music was turned back on and the party revived itself.

The man in the leopard-print jacket was Duke Riley. The work of Mr. Riley, a tattooist and installation artist by profession, has a prankish streak, so much that many people believed the drama outside the door had been staged as an elaborate tribute to what was Rotgut’s closing night. In 2006, after reading about illegal drinking establishments that had operated during the turn of the century in the Rockaways, Mr. Riley and his friends se! t up an outdoor saloon for one night under the Belt Parkway in Queens, near the water.

Drinks were priced at a nickel each, and bartenders did not make change. In the early morning, visitors watched a full-gear boxing match between two female guests, in a kind of homage to the unsanctioned prize fights that had taken place on the same beaches a hundred years earlier. Mr. Riley staged another ode to the New York Harbor a year later, when he built an 18th-century-style submarine and drove it through the bay toward Manhattan, seeking to re-enact an obscure naval battle from the Revolutionary War.

That endeavor, like the Rockaway project, was interrupted by vexed members of the police, who in the case of the submarine suspected an act of terrorism was in progress. Mr. Riley continued to pursue his interest in history and subversive performance in 2009 with still another project â€" this one mostly legal â€" involving a mock naval battle by flooding a pool at the World’s Fair grounds in Flushing Meadows. Describing the fully decorated battleships and costumed combatants in an article in New York magazine, the critic Jerry Saltz called it “one of the finest performance events in recent memory.”

At least since then, Mr. Riley has not had an exposure problem, though he is still occasionally startled by the degree to which his group projects can turn into hip places-to-be. Rotgut is one such example. A year ago, when he first envisioned converting his tattoo parlor on Franklin Street into a speakeasy, collaborators, including an assistant in the parlor, who insisted on being identified as “Sully’’ Sullivan, and Annie Evelyn, a furniture maker he met while living in Providence, R.I., pictured something assiduously low-key.

“I was just looking for a co! ol place ! to hang out, drink, have bands play, and occasionally do some art,” Mr. Riley said, explaining that the speakeasy was advertised on a strictly word-of-mouth basis. On an otherwise quiet street, bartenders at the nearby Lulu’s and Pencil Factory who heard what was going on were undisturbed, happy for the collateral business the speakeasy would bring. Musicians invited themselves, and timed their sets based on lulls in guests’ conversations. Anyone who wrote about the place was to be banned.

Attendance exploded in the third week in January, when Mr. Riley announced that he would be terminating the operation in a mass e-mail, noting that he was open for suggestions on ways to commemorate the end of Rotgut’s run. Jessica Delfino, a musician and comedian, played songs on her acoustic guitar while feigning the sighs and muted sobs of an emotionally demonstrative singer-songwriter. The bar was again used as a stage by a cymbalist for the Hungry Marching Band, who muscled their way into the 180-squarefoot room on Saturday about an hour before the visit by the authorities, dressed in full game-day regalia.

Later, Sully, who was serving as a bartender, projected a 1980 Sonny Chiba film, “Shogun’s Ninja,” on a screen opposite the bar. Sully had been toting an archaic Walkman cassette player for music, and played mix tapes he had prepared especially for the evening. The alternative, he said, would have been flipping records over a turntable. But there was simply no room.



Tale of Gorilla\'s Renewed Life Wins Newbery Award

“The One and Only Ivan,” a tale of a gorilla who makes a new life for himself after being moved from a tiny cage in a mall to a zoo, won the John Newbery Medal for the year’s outstanding contribution to children’s literature.

The book, written by Katherine Applegate, a prolific author of children’s books, was inspired by the real-life tale of a gorilla in Washington State named Ivan. After being kept in a cage at a mall for 27 years, he becomes a celebrity when he is moved to a zoo in Atlanta where he makes paintings and signs them with a thumbprint.

This is the first Newbery Award for Ms. Applegate, who has written numerous books, including the Roscoe Riley Rules chapter book series. With her husband, Michael Grant, she wrote “Animorphs,” which has sold more than 35 million copies worldwide.

The Newbery award, which is regarded both as the most prestigious honor in children’s literature and as a reliable booster of sales, was announced Monday by the American Library Assciation at its midwinter meeting in Seattle.

The association’s other top award, the Randolph Caldecott Medal, for the most distinguished picture book for children, was particularly competitive. The association named five finalists, more than usual, and presented the award to “This Is Not My Hat,” by Jon Kassen, a dark tale about a little fish who has stolen a hat and suffers for it.

This post has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: January 28, 2013

An earlier version of this post included a headline that misspelled the name of the prize for the year's outstanding contribution to children's literature. It is the Newbery award, not the Newberry award.



De Blasio\'s Announcement Is Upstaged by Son\'s Hair

The hairstyle of Dante de Blasio, right, attracted attention Sunday when his father, Bill de Blasio, center, announced his mayoral candidacy. (Mr. de Blasio's wife, Chirlane McCray, is at left.)Ozier Muhammad/The New York Times The hairstyle of Dante de Blasio, right, attracted attention Sunday when his father, Bill de Blasio, center, announced his mayoral candidacy. (Mr. de Blasio’s wife, Chirlane McCray, is at left.)

The city’s public advocate, Bill de Blasio, threw his hat in the ring for mayor on Sunday. Rather than go the usual route of announcing his candidacy at City Hall, Mr. de Blasio, who has cast himself as a champion of the forgotten, held news conference in front of his house in Park Slope, Brooklyn, accompanied by his wife, who introduced him as an “outer-borough working dad,” and their teenage son, who also gave a speech.

Mr. de Blasio has worked in government since the Dinkins administration and amassed some legitimate credentials. But some of the most animated discussion on the Internet about his announcement was not about his track record advocating for the homeless or government transparency as public advocate; or his work as a housing administrator; or his management of Hillary Rodham Clinton’s successful 2000 Senate campaign; or his two terms on the City Council; or even about Mr. de Blasio himself.

It consisted of people swooning over his son’s hair.

Mr. de Blasio is white. His wife, Chirlane McCray, is black. Their son, Dante, 15, wears his hair in what The Daily News called “a stupendous Afro.”

And across the Twitterverse, Dante’s hair was the subject of considerable fascination. Some commenters granted Mr. de Blasio a certain degree of cred-by-association.

Other wags predicted that Mr. de Blasio’s opponents would urge their kids to grow a natural by any means necessary.

Many posters simply expressed admiration for Dante’s hairdo.

But of course nothing is simple when it comes to race and politics.

Sometimes, perhaps, an Afro is just an Afro. Dante de Blasio’s Afro, though, seems destined for a run as some sort of potent symbol, one whose meaning lies in the eye of the beholder.



Tale of Gorilla\'s Renewed Life Wins Newberry Award

“The One and Only Ivan,” a tale of a gorilla who makes a new life for himself after being moved from a tiny cage in a mall to the zoo, won the John Newbery Medal for the year’s outstanding contribution to children’s literature.

The book, written by Katherine Applegate, a prolific author of children’s books, is inspired by the real-life tale of a gorilla in Washington State named Ivan. After being kept in a cage at a mall for 27 years, he later becomes a celebrity when he is moved to Zoo in Atlanta, where he makes paintings and signs them with a thumb print.

This is the first Newberry Award for Ms. Applegate, who has written numerous books, including the Roscoe Riley Rules chapter book series. With her husband, Michael Grant, she wrote “Animorphs,” which has sold more than 35 million copies worldwide.

The Newbery award, which is regarded both as the most prestigious honor in children’s literature and as a reliable booster of sales, was announced Monday by the American Libary Association at its midwinter meeting in Seattle.

The association’s other top award, the Randolph Caldecott Medal, for the most distinguished picture book for children, was particularly competitive. The association named five finalists, more than usual, but gave the award to “This Is Not My Hat,” by Jon Kassen, a dark tale about a little fish who has stolen a hat and suffers for it.



Mayor\'s Relationship With Speaker Comes With Candid Fashion Advice

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and Christine C. Quinn, the City Council speaker, in 2011.Stan Honda/Agence France-Presse â€" Getty Images Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and Christine C. Quinn, the City Council speaker, in 2011.

A few weeks ago, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg arrived at a party in an Upper East Side town house, gestured toward a woman in a noticeably tight gown, and offered, to anyone bothering to listen, a lurid admiration of her backside.

“Look at the ass on her,” the mayor said, according to Jonathan Van Meter, another party guest who happened to overhear the mayor.

Unfortunately for Mr. Bloomberg, Mr. Van Meter also happens to be a journalist â€" and he included the startling anecdote in a New York magazine cover story that was published on Sunday.

The article, a profile of Christine C. Quinn, the City Council speaker and Democratic candidate for mayor, offers insight not only into Mr. Bloomberg’s party manners (or lack thereof), but also his strongly held opinions on personal appearance, which he has a habit of sharing with Ms. Quinn.

In a candid moment, Ms. Quinn confided to Mr. Van Meter that Mr. Bloomberg frequently and vociferously weighs in on her style choices, often in a judgmental manner that could fairly be compared to that of a Bravo reality show host.

“The mayor is going to yell at me when I get out of the car because I have flat boots on,” Ms. Quinn told Mr. Van Meter. “The mayor has no use for flat shoes.”

Is that so

“I was at a parade with him once and he said, ‘What are those’” Ms. Quinn said. “I said, ‘They’re comfortable,’ and he said, ‘I neve! r want to hear those words out of your mouth again.’”

“He likes me in high heels,” Ms Quinn continued, amid laughter from her aides and security guards.

The mayor is also critical of Ms. Quinn’s hair-dyeing routine, often pointing out when she has missed a few gray roots.

The speaker does not take kindly to those remarks.

“I’m like, ‘Did you wake up being this big of’” a jerk Ms. Quinn said, although she opted for a more colorful appellation. “Or did it take, like, all day to ramp up to it to be able to insult me like that”

The speaker, who counts Mr. Bloomberg as a key ally as she prepares her mayoral bid, seemed generally unbothered by the mayor’s wisecracks, calling Mr. Bloomberg “much more silly than people think.”

She described their relationship as “not that complicated” and suggested that she finds pragmatic ways to collaborate with Mr. Bloomberg’s team, even if, as she put it, “he’s got a potty mouth.”



Crosby, Stills and Nash to Join Fund-Raiser for Jazz at Lincoln Center

From left, Stephen Stills, Graham Nash and David Crosby at a benefit concert for the City Parks Foundation in 2008.Diane Bondareff/Associated Press From left, Stephen Stills, Graham Nash and David Crosby at a benefit concert for the City Parks Foundation in 2008.

Crosby, Stills and Nash will perform with Wynton Marsalis and his orchestra in May to raise money for Jazz at Lincoln Center, continuing the nonprofit’s strategy of joining with pop and rock musicians to generate financial support for jazz.

The famous folk-rock trio will perform two shows with the Jazz at Lincoln Center orchestra at the Rose Theater, one on May 1 for the institute’s annual fund-raising gala and a second performance for the general public o May 3. Entitled “The Crosby, Stills & Nash Songbook,” the program will consist of hits from the band’s catalog arranged by Mr. Marsalis and other members of the orchestra.

Mr. Marsalis, the virtuoso trumpeter who is Jazz at Lincoln Center’s managing and artistic director, presented a similar genre mash-up for the gala last year, collaborating with with Paul Simon and his band.

At the 2011 gala, Eric Clapton joined Mr. Marsalis and the orchestra for a program dominated by traditional blues and gospel songs.

“Individually and collectively, David Crosby, Stephen Stills and Graham Nash are influential and important figures in American music,” Mr. Marsalis said in a statement. “Their music is rooted in American folk, po! p and blues traditions and their experiments with form, harmony and orchestration will make for a natural collaboration.”

Mr. Crosby said, “We are excited and fascinated with this merging of musical streams and look forward to a night to remember.”



Shots Fired at Car Carrying Rick Ross

Rick Ross performing in 2012.Chad Batka for The New York Times Rick Ross performing in 2012.

Witnesses told local television reporters in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. that someone fired several rounds at a Rolls-Royce carrying the rapper Rick Ross, causing the car to crash into a building.

No one was injured in the incident, which happened at about 5 a.m. on Monday on Las Olas Boulevard and 15th Avenue, the Fort Lauderdale police said. “The occupants of the vehicle have asked for their information to be withheld from being released,” a spokeswoman for the Fort Lauderdale Police, Det. DeAnna Garcia, said. “They obviously, with everything that just took place, are fearful for their lives and their families lives.”

A local television station reported that an employee of the nearby Floridian restaurant and the manager of one other business had seen Mr. Ross and an unidentified woman get out of the vehicle after the crash.

The police said multiple shots were fired at the car, causing it to swerve and crash into an apartment building at 1410 East Las Olas Boulevard.

As a rapper, Mr. Ross is known for cultivating a persona as a Miami street gangster. He founded the Maybach Music Group and his most recent album, “God Forgives, I Don’t” is nominated this year for the Grammy Award for Best Rap Album.



Police Investigating Chris Brown For Assault Said to Involve Frank Ocean

Chris BrownJonathan Alcorn/Reuters Chris Brown

Los Angeles law enforcement officials said on Monday morning they were investigating the singer Chris Brown for his possible involvement in an assault that occurred in West Hollywood on Sunday night.

The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department said in a statement reported by The Associated Press that it was looking into an incident that occurred outside the Westlake Recording Studios where witnesses said that six men had been involved in a fight over a parking space. “The altercation allegedly led to Chris Brown punching the victim,” the statement said./p>

The celebrity Web site TMZ.com reported that the unnamed victim referred to in the statement was the singer Frank Ocean. Mr. Ocean, who is up for six awards at the Grammys next month, wrote on his Twitter account: “got jumped by chris and a couple guys. lol.” In another post, he added: “cut my finger now I can’t play w two hands at the grammys.”

Mr. Brown, a fellow Grammy nominee, was arrested after the 2009 ceremony for attacking the singer Rihanna during an argument in their car on the night of the show. He later pleaded guilty to one felony count of assault and was sentenced to five years of probation and six months of community labor. Last summer, he was inv! olved in a brawl at a New York club where he feuded with the rapper Drake. In November, Mr. Brown temporarily shut down his Twitter account after an online war of words with the comedian Jenny Johnson.

Representatives for Mr. Brown and Mr. Ocean have not immediately commented on Monday’s police investigation.



Austen Fans to Celebrate 200 Years of \'Pride and Prejudice\'

A first edition of Stefan Wermuth/Reuters A first edition of “Pride and Prejudice” is on display at Jane Austen’s House Museum in Chawton, England.

Jane Austen lovers around the world have begun busting out their bonnets for a yearlong celebration of the 200th anniversary of the publication of “Pride and Prejudice,” which loosed its famous first line on the world on Jan. 28, 1813.

It’s too late to secure an invitation to the BBC’s meticulous reconstruction of the Netherfield Ball, site of a pivotal encounter between Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy. (It was filmed last week at Chawton House, the Hampshire manor that once belonged to Austen’s brother Edward, and will be broadcast in May.) But there are plenty of public festivities on the calendar.

On Monday, the Jane Austen Center in Bath, England, will hold a 12-hour read-a-thon, to be broadcast live online. The Free Library of Philadelphia is hosting an all-day celebration including lectures, film screenings and “pop-up” theatrical performances of scenes from the novel. Goucher College in Baltimore, home to what it calls the largest Austen collection in North America, will open “Pride and Prejudice: A 200 Year Affair,” an exhibition of rare editions and other items documenting the novel’s reception over the past two centuries.

Those who can’t make it out of the house can enter a bicentennial essay contest sponsored by the Jane Austen Society of North America. If that’s too taxing, Penguin Classics has been encouraging readers to post favorite lines from the book on Twitter. (Sample: “For what do we live, but to make sport for our neighbors, and laugh at them in our turn”)

Juliette Wells, an associate professor of English at Gouche and the author of the book “Everybody’s Jane: Austen in the Popular Imagination,” said in an e-mail that she did not know if the centennial of the book, on the eve of World War I, was much noted, though the bicentennial of Austen’s birth in December 1975 was celebrated with commemorative stamps in Britain and many pronouncements on both sides of the Atlantic. That year also saw the publication of one of the first scholarly studies of Austen adaptations, Andrew Wright’s article “Jane Austen Adapted,” which concluded that no modern version could come close to the original â€" a finding that Colin Firth fanatics, to say nothing of the zombie hordes, ma! y ardentl! y dispute.

“The enthusiasm and inventiveness that we’re seeing now has everything to do with what’s happened in the decades since that bicentennial in 1975,” Ms. Wells said by e-mail. “The beloved 1995 mini-series adaptation of ‘Pride and Prejudice,’ for sure, but also the influence of the Jane Austen Society of North America (founded in 1979) and of course the Internet and social media. So many people of all ages, nationalities, and walks of life now self-identify as Austen fans and are out and proud about that. They love, love, love ‘P&P’ and are overjoyed at any opportunity to celebrate and share that love.”



Austen Fans to Celebrate 200 Years of \'Pride and Prejudice\'

A first edition of Stefan Wermuth/Reuters A first edition of “Pride and Prejudice” is on display at Jane Austen’s House Museum in Chawton, England.

Jane Austen lovers around the world have begun busting out their bonnets for a yearlong celebration of the 200th anniversary of the publication of “Pride and Prejudice,” which loosed its famous first line on the world on Jan. 28, 1813.

It’s too late to secure an invitation to the BBC’s meticulous reconstruction of the Netherfield Ball, site of a pivotal encounter between Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy. (It was filmed last week at Chawton House, the Hampshire manor that once belonged to Austen’s brother Edward, and will be broadcast in May.) But there are plenty of public festivities on the calendar.

On Monday, the Jane Austen Center in Bath, England, will hold a 12-hour read-a-thon, to be broadcast live online. The Free Library of Philadelphia is hosting an all-day celebration including lectures, film screenings and “pop-up” theatrical performances of scenes from the novel. Goucher College in Baltimore, home to what it calls the largest Austen collection in North America, will open “Pride and Prejudice: A 200 Year Affair,” an exhibition of rare editions and other items documenting the novel’s reception over the past two centuries.

Those who can’t make it out of the house can enter a bicentennial essay contest sponsored by the Jane Austen Society of North America. If that’s too taxing, Penguin Classics has been encouraging readers to post favorite lines from the book on Twitter. (Sample: “For what do we live, but to make sport for our neighbors, and laugh at them in our turn”)

Juliette Wells, an associate professor of English at Gouche and the author of the book “Everybody’s Jane: Austen in the Popular Imagination,” said in an e-mail that she did not know if the centennial of the book, on the eve of World War I, was much noted, though the bicentennial of Austen’s birth in December 1975 was celebrated with commemorative stamps in Britain and many pronouncements on both sides of the Atlantic. That year also saw the publication of one of the first scholarly studies of Austen adaptations, Andrew Wright’s article “Jane Austen Adapted,” which concluded that no modern version could come close to the original â€" a finding that Colin Firth fanatics, to say nothing of the zombie hordes, ma! y ardentl! y dispute.

“The enthusiasm and inventiveness that we’re seeing now has everything to do with what’s happened in the decades since that bicentennial in 1975,” Ms. Wells said by e-mail. “The beloved 1995 mini-series adaptation of ‘Pride and Prejudice,’ for sure, but also the influence of the Jane Austen Society of North America (founded in 1979) and of course the Internet and social media. So many people of all ages, nationalities, and walks of life now self-identify as Austen fans and are out and proud about that. They love, love, love ‘P&P’ and are overjoyed at any opportunity to celebrate and share that love.”