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    Pride and Prejudice

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    Pride and Prejudice Paper Pride and Prejudice Pride and Prejudice is a satiric English novel written by Jane Austen. Satire is a work that blends a censorious attitude with humor and wit for improving human institutions or humanity. Darcy and Lady Catherine are wealthy people who treat the poor differently than people of the same class as them. Mr. Collins is a middle class man who is a cousin of the Bennet girls. Pride and Prejudice should be considered a satiric novel because Jane Austen

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    Pride and Prejudice The first line of Pride and Prejudice reveals that a man who has money desires a wife. In the novel‚ Jane Austen criticizes British society and social expectations of the 19th century. Austen does this by her use of satire in her portrayal of her characters and in multiple situations. Her use of satire is to challenge the way things were in that time. Specific characters are the opposite of what they should be. However‚ some are just as they should be‚ and Austen pokes fun at

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    Max Railing Mr. Shanahan British Literature Honors December 11‚ 2012 Social class within Pride and Prejudice plays a key role throughout the novel. Social class not only determines where one is placed in the class structure‚ but also the amount of land‚ money‚ and potential suitor candidates. Where one is placed within the social hierarchy is based on what one does for a living and their social status as well. For instance‚ Mr. and Mrs. Bennet are considered ‘landed gentry‚’ meaning they do

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    Wright’s 2005 film adaptation of Jane Austen’s novel ‘Pride and Prejudice’. Has Joe Write brought this classic love story back to life for modern society‚ or diminished the novels essence through simplifying the original text? Through evaluation of the creative choices made when converting a novel to film‚ it is evident that the director has successfully captured the significance and nuances of power relationships as communicated in ‘Pride and Prejudice’. Converting the 61 chapter novel to a 128 minute

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    Book report Camille Beurret Book: Pride and Prejudice Author: Jane Austen Publisher (+place): Harper Collins Publishers‚ London First edition: 1813 Summary Pride and Prejudice tells the story of Mr. and Mrs. Bennet and their five unmarried daughters. The family isn’t very rich‚ so the main concern of Mrs. Bennet’s life is to see that all her daughters are married‚ preferably to men with a lot of money. When Mr. Bingley‚ a handsome‚ rich‚ young bachelor arrives to stay briefly in Hartfordshire

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    One of the central themes in Jane Austen’s nineteenth-century novel Pride and Prejudice is the roles of passion and reasoning in justifying a successful marriage. The characters’ differing viewpoints on passion and reason in marriage reflect the contrasts between society’s views on marriage and Austen’s. Society in general sees marriage as an act that should be justified by logic rather than affection. Austen‚ however‚ sees passion as integral to the health of a relationship as well. The five marriages

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    Pride and Prejudice

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    Scholarly Pride... or is it Prejudice? The title of a literary work often reveals its significance as the story unfolds. While reason behind some titles are obvious‚ other novels require extensive in depth analysis to truly understand the meaning behind the title. Jane Austen ’s Pride and Prejudice certainly falls into the latter. Many scholars have conflicting views of the meaning behind Pride and Prejudice‚ leading to a great deal of scholarly debate. In particular‚ Robert Fox and D.J. Dooley

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    and unpleasant fellow‚ full of pride and ill will who eventually comes to love Elizabeth and change his mannerisms for her. He shows his love for her by helping her sister in the marriage to Wickham and by being cordial and polite after her refusal of marriage. He eventually succeeds in winning her love in return. Elizabeth Bennet - The protagonist of the novel and the second Bennet daughter‚ Elizabeth is considered witty and sarcastic with her own streak of pride. She is a little plain compared

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    Pride and Prejudice

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    Cited: Austen‚ Jane. Pride and Prejudice. New York: Modern Library‚ 1995. Print.

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    society. With the gender rules clearly defined‚ women lived with less rights they could count on one hand‚ causing the viscous cycle of the reliance on men for money‚ social acceptance‚ and family relations to persist for many generations. Pride and Prejudice‚ published in 1813 and set in this time‚ expresses the hardships of a masculine society for women like Elizabeth Bennet‚ who were not blind to the wrongdoings of society. While many women of the day chose to conform to social norms‚ Elizabeth

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