Under this heading, the (self-described) Old Fogey has been doing a series of posts on the novels of Jane Austen. In the latest of them he's taking the author to task for her treatment - or, as he sees it, mistreatment - of Mary Crawford in Mansfield Park. He loves Mary Crawford as he loves Jane Austen, and reckons Mary gets a shabby deal from her creator. He ends by signalling Anne Stott's discussion of the same book, calling Anne's view 'more orthodox' than his own.
I wonder if there really is an orthodoxy about this. Apart from several Austen biographies, I haven't read much of the critical literature about her, but what I have read gave me the impression (registered here) that the Old Fogey's view has been shared by quite a few of Jane Austen's readers.