Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen is a novel about the Bennet
family, and more specifically, Elizabeth Bennet-the headstrong, rebellious
daughter of the family. In this novel, Elizabeth
explores the meaning of love and finds love for herself. Along the way, she discovers the limits and
constraints of living in a world strictly governed by society. The standards of the society affect all the
characters in the novel, which Jane Austen uses to create a satire of 19th
century English society.
Elizabeth
Bennet lives in a society that is extremely concerned with appearances and treat
women merely as objects of affection. Most
of the characters in Pride and Prejudice
follow with society’s expectations, including Mrs. Bennet and Elizabeth’s
sisters. If they don’t follow the
societal norms, they risk being criticized by the other members of
society. For all the young women, the
most important thing in life is to search for a husband to be able to start a
family. Even Mrs. Bennet believes that
her only job is to raise her daughters and marry them off to wealthy men. Every year, there are several balls in which
the ladies seek out potential husbands. As
a result, the women are not valued for their intelligence or abilities, but
instead for the way they can charm a man.
Because of their desire to meet
a potential husband, the women of this society are rather shallow. They spend copious amounts of time
socializing, meeting as many people as possible and trying to get invitations
to balls. The young ladies don’t care
about anything except fancy dresses for the balls and meeting handsome, rich
men that they might be able to marry. Lydia
is an excellent example of such a character.
She craves parties and attention from men. She marries early, even though she doesn’t
know the man very well. Love is often
not a factor in marriages, all that matters is that the man has money to
support the young lady and is willing to marry her.
Elizabeth
Bennet, however, goes against society and refuses to be obsessed with parties
and socializing. She is one of the only
characters that thinks for herself and does what she wants, not what is expected
of her. She enjoys spending time reading
and prefers to take her time finding a husband.
She is even offered a hand in marriage from a man who is relatively
wealthy, but she refuses it because she does not love the man. This is almost unheard of in society and causes
her mother to become furious. Sometimes,
Elizabeth’s actions even cause the other members of society to feel horrified,
such as when she chose to walk to the Bingley’s house and dirtied her
skirt. Despite Elizabeth’s defiance of
the societal norms, she finds true love and ends up happily engaged.
Austen
uses the contrast of Elizabeth’s actions and society’s actions to effectively
create a satire of nineteenth century British society. Elizabeth represents the reasoning and intelligence
present in all people, but the actions of society show how that reason is
pushed away and replaced with the constant desire to impress and follow all of
society’s rules. When seeing Elizabeth’s
reason against society’s standards, the audience realizes how silly the society
seems.
It's interesting that you said Mrs. Bennett and Elizabeth's sisters strictly follow the societal standards. Maybe in the aspect that women should be silly and mere objects of affection, but other than that they really don't follow the norms. This can be seen even with how the marriage between Lydia and the officer comes about. It's only after Lydia has run off with the officer and almost brought disgrace down upon her whole family that she marries him!
ReplyDeleteAlso, you might want to combine your first two body paragraphs. They're really talking about the same thing (standards in the society). It would make more sense structure-wise.
Hi Natalie,
ReplyDeleteI think you could connect your first body paragraph to your thesis a bit more. I see where you are going with it and I understand all the points that you make, but I think you focused more on the significance of marriage in the society, rather than how it satires the 19th century English society. Because of that, I agree with Haley that it makes sense to combine the first and second body paragraphs because the second body paragraph seems to clarify the effect of the significance of marriage and how it satires society.
Your last body paragraph does a great job of showing how a character that does not follow the society's norms of the time can achieve success. Just a suggestion, you don't need to take it because it's just something that I would do, it might be nice to mention how a character who followed the society's norms didn't achieve success. It might strengthen your point, but it's up to you.
Nice job!