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Under which school would you clasify her? hey i just want to know what ppl think thnx Posted by bayan on Jan 20, 2009. |
Pride and Prejudice Group
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The answer to this question, as with so many questions in literature, is that it all depends. In one way Jane Austen can be seen as a feminist writer because she was the first to give women the central role in a number of works of fiction, and not just women but strong independent characters to be taken seriously by both men and other women. Elizabeth Bennet is probably the best known example, a very modern-seeming girl in her attitudes and outlook, even - by the standards of the time - a bit too forthright and impudent. On the other hand, Jane Austen's heroines do generally end up going down a conventional path i.e. marrying and settling down in the manner that might have been expected of them from the beginning. It could even be argued that the very qualities that distinguish them, independence and vivacity, are in the end employed to secure them the men they want. In other words, they artfully contrive to have men chase them for their apparent individuality. Elizabeth almost says as much when she playfully (?) answers her sister that her attraction to Darcy began the first time time she saw his stately home, Pemberley. I personally see Jane Austen as a very realistic writer in this sense, not necessarily feminist or anti-feminist, but as someone who portrays people as getting what they want or need from other people by whatever means they have at their disposal. Posted by anzio45 on Jan 20, 2009. |

