Thursday, September 19, 2019
Comparing Societys Influence in Pride and Prejudice and The Edible Wom
Society's Influence in Pride and Prejudice and The Edible Woman     à     à  Ã  Ã   Throughout history,  society has played an important role in forming     the value and attitudes of the population.à   Jane Austen's Pride and     Prejudice and Margaret Atwood's The Edible Woman are two novels which     exemplify the negative effects of society's influence. Both Elizabeth     Bennet and Marian McAlpin are strong women who rebel against society's     influences in their lives.à   They refuse to accept the pre-set roles  and     identities handed to them.à   Both women realize that the individual's  needs     are not necessarily the same as what society imposes on them; they rebel     against this very society in order to gain the independence necessary to     discover what they want from life.     à       à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Society in the early 19th century world of  Pride and Prejudice is     represented through Mrs. Bennet and those like her, who are "of mean     understanding, little information, and uncertain temper" (Austen 53).à    From     the beginning of the novel, society prominently displays its views on     marriage.à   When Mr. Bingly moves to town, Mrs. Bennet immediately  entreats     her husband to go introduce himself.à   Mrs. Bennet describes Bingly as  "a     single man of large fortune; four or five thousand a year.à   What a  fine     thing for our girls!" (51).à   Bingly is immediately acceptable due to  his     money and connections, and Mrs. Bennet is already dreaming that one of  her     children will marry him. In fact, "the business of her life was to get  her     daughters married" (53).à  Ã   One of Elizabeth's close friends,  Charlotte     Lucas, feels "happiness in marriage is entirely a matter of chance" (69).     She feels that marriage is a...              ...o a role which proves to be very  destructive.     à  She, too, takes the control of her life away from society and puts it  back     where it belongs, in her own hands.à   Thus rebellion is necessary in  both     situations in order to fulfill the needs of the characters and restore  them     to their previously healthy, happy lives.     à       à       Works Cited     à       Atwood, Margaret. The Edible Woman. Toronto : McClelland-Bantam Inc,  1969.     à       Austen, Jane. Pride and Prejudice. Toronto : Penguin Books, 1972.     à       Harding, D. W. Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice and Mansfield     Park. Toronto: The MacMillan Press Ltd, 1976.     à       Keith, W. J. Introducing Margaret Atwood's The Edible Woman. Toronto :  ECW     Press, 1989.     à       Litz, Walton A. Jane Austen a Study of her Artistic Development.à   New  York     : Oxford Universityà   Press, 1965                    Comparing Society's Influence in Pride and Prejudice and The Edible Wom  Society's Influence in Pride and Prejudice and The Edible Woman     à     à  Ã  Ã   Throughout history,  society has played an important role in forming     the value and attitudes of the population.à   Jane Austen's Pride and     Prejudice and Margaret Atwood's The Edible Woman are two novels which     exemplify the negative effects of society's influence. Both Elizabeth     Bennet and Marian McAlpin are strong women who rebel against society's     influences in their lives.à   They refuse to accept the pre-set roles  and     identities handed to them.à   Both women realize that the individual's  needs     are not necessarily the same as what society imposes on them; they rebel     against this very society in order to gain the independence necessary to     discover what they want from life.     à       à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Society in the early 19th century world of  Pride and Prejudice is     represented through Mrs. Bennet and those like her, who are "of mean     understanding, little information, and uncertain temper" (Austen 53).à    From     the beginning of the novel, society prominently displays its views on     marriage.à   When Mr. Bingly moves to town, Mrs. Bennet immediately  entreats     her husband to go introduce himself.à   Mrs. Bennet describes Bingly as  "a     single man of large fortune; four or five thousand a year.à   What a  fine     thing for our girls!" (51).à   Bingly is immediately acceptable due to  his     money and connections, and Mrs. Bennet is already dreaming that one of  her     children will marry him. In fact, "the business of her life was to get  her     daughters married" (53).à  Ã   One of Elizabeth's close friends,  Charlotte     Lucas, feels "happiness in marriage is entirely a matter of chance" (69).     She feels that marriage is a...              ...o a role which proves to be very  destructive.     à  She, too, takes the control of her life away from society and puts it  back     where it belongs, in her own hands.à   Thus rebellion is necessary in  both     situations in order to fulfill the needs of the characters and restore  them     to their previously healthy, happy lives.     à       à       Works Cited     à       Atwood, Margaret. The Edible Woman. Toronto : McClelland-Bantam Inc,  1969.     à       Austen, Jane. Pride and Prejudice. Toronto : Penguin Books, 1972.     à       Harding, D. W. Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice and Mansfield     Park. Toronto: The MacMillan Press Ltd, 1976.     à       Keith, W. J. Introducing Margaret Atwood's The Edible Woman. Toronto :  ECW     Press, 1989.     à       Litz, Walton A. Jane Austen a Study of her Artistic Development.à   New  York     : Oxford Universityà   Press, 1965                      
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