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Book Review

                           By Jane Austen




Submitted by:
Samia Arshad and
Isbah Abdul Malik   XI-G
   Jane Austen (16 December 1775 – 18 July 1817)
    was an English novelist whose works of romantic
    fiction, set among the landed gentry, earned her a
    place as one of the most widely read writers in
    English literature.
   She was educated primarily by her father and
    older brothers as well as through her own reading.
   Her works include Sense and Sensibility(1811),
    Pride and Prejudice (1813), Mansfield Park(1814)
    and Emma (1816). She also wrote Northanger
    Abbey and Persuasion, both published in 1818,
    and began writing Sanditon, but died before
    completing it.
   Her plots mostly highlight the dependence of
    women on marriage to secure social standing and
    economic security.
   She earned little fame during her lifetime but the
    publication in 1869 of her nephew's A Memoir of
    Jane Austen introduced her to a wider public and it
    was by 1940s that she became widely accepted in
    academia as a great English writer.
SETTING
In the story the readers are taken to different
towns and places but the story is set in
  England at
large.
Following are the places discussed in the
  novel.
 Longbourn: The Bennet family estate near
  the town of Meryton. It will be inherited by Mr.
  Collins when Mr. Bennet dies.
 Netherfield: Bingley's estate near Longbourn
  and near the town of Meryton.
 Meryton: Town near Longbourn where
  Mrs.Phillips lives and the soldiers are
   Rosings: Lady Catherine De Bourgh's estate in
    Hunsford. Mr. Collins has a parish near this
    estate, and Elizabeth visits Rosings while she is
    visiting Charlotte.
   Pemberley: Mr. Darcy's estate in Derbyshire.
   Hertfordshire: The county, where Longbourn,
    Netherfield, and Meryton are all located.
   Hunsford: The town where Charlotte and Mr.
    Collins live.
   Brighton: The town to which the soldiers from
    Meryton are moved.
   Derbyshire: The county where Mr. Darcy's
    estate, Pemberly, is located.
   As said in the words of Mary at the beginning of the novel, "human nature is
    particularly prone to [pride]" (Volume I, Chapter 5). In the novel, pride prevents
    the characters from seeing the truth of a situation and from achieving
    happiness in life.
   Pride is one of the main barriers that creates an obstacle to Elizabeth and
    Darcy's marriage. Darcy's pride in his position in society leads him initially to
    scorn anyone outside of his own social circle.
   Elizabeth's vanity clouds her judgment, making her prone to think ill of Darcy
    and to think well of Wickham.
   In the end, Elizabeth's rebukes of Darcy help him to realize his fault and to
    change accordingly, as demonstrated in his genuinely friendly treatment of the
    Gardiners, whom he previously would have scorned because of their low
    social class.
    Darcy's letter shows Elizabeth that her judgments were wrong and she
    realizes that they were based on vanity, not on reason.
 Pride and prejudice are intimately related in the novel. As critic A.
  Walton Litz comments, "in Pride and Prejudice one cannot equate
  Darcy with Pride, or Elizabeth with Prejudice; Darcy's pride of place
  is founded on social prejudice, while Elizabeth's initial prejudice
  against him is rooted in pride of her own quick perceptions."
 However, Darcy tries to overcome his prejudice as it is demonstrated
  when he treats the Gardiners with great civility. The Gardiners are a
  much lower class than Darcy, because Mr. Gardiner is a lawyer and
  must practice a trade to earn a living, rather than living off of the
  interest of an estate as gentlemen do.
 From the beginning of the novel Elizabeth prides herself on her keen
  ability for perception. Yet this supposed ability is often lacking, as in
  Elizabeth's judgments of Darcy and Wickham.
   Austen is critical of the gender injustices
    present in 19th century English society.
    The novel demonstrates how women such as
    Charlotte need to marry simply in order to gain
    financial security.
    The entailment of the Longbourn estate is an
    extreme hardship on the Bennet family, and is
    quite obviously unjust. The entailment of Mr.
    Bennet's estate leaves his daughters in a poor
    financial situation which both requires them to
    marry and makes it more difficult to marry well.
   Clearly, Austen believes that woman are at
    least as intelligent and capable as men, and
    considers their inferior status in society to be
    unjust. She herself went against convention by
    remaining single and earning a living through
    her novels.
   Austen portrays the family as primarily responsible for the
    intellectual and moral education of children. Mr. and Mrs.
    Bennet's failure to provide this education for their daughters leads
    to the utter shamelessness, foolishness, and immorality of Lydia.
   Elizabeth and Jane have managed to develop virtue and strong
    characters in spite of the negligence of their parents, perhaps
    through the help of their studies and the good influence of Mr.
    and Mrs. Gardiner, who are the only relatives in the novel that
    take a serious concern in the girls' well-being and provide sound
    guidance.
    Elizabeth and Jane are constantly forced to put up with the
    foolishness and poor judgment of their mother and the sarcastic
    indifference of their father.
    Even when Elizabeth advises her father not to allow Lydia to go
    to Brighton, he ignores the advice because he thinks it would be
    too difficult to deal with Lydia's complaining.
   The result is the scandal of Lydia's elopement with Wickham.
   Considerations of class are omnipresent in
    the novel.
   Darcy's inordinate pride is based on his
    extreme class-consciousness. Yet eventually
    he sees that factors other than wealth
    determine who truly belongs in the
    aristocracy.
   Those such as Miss Bingley and Mrs. Hurst,
    who are born into the aristocracy, are idle,
    mean-spirited and annoying, Mr. and Mrs.
    Gardiner are not members of the aristocracy
    in terms of wealth or birth but are natural
    aristocrats by virtue of their intelligence,
    good-breeding and virtue.
    The comic formality of Mr. Collins and his
    obsequious relationship with Lady Catherine
    serve as a satire class consciousness and
    social formalities.
   The novel portrays a world in which society takes an interest
    in the private virtue of its members.
    When Lydia elopes with Wickham, therefore, it is scandal to
    the whole society and an injury to entire Bennet family.
   Darcy considers his failure to expose the wickedness of
    Wickham's character to be a breach of his social duty
    because if Wickham's true character had been known others
    would not have been so easily deceived by him.
   While Austen is critical of society's ability to judge properly, as
    demonstrated especially in their judgments of Wickham and
    Darcy, she does believe that society has a crucial role in
    promoting virtue.
    Austen has a profound sense that individuals are social
    beings and that their happiness is found through relationships
    with others.
   According to critic Richard Simpson, Austen has a "thorough
    consciousness that man is a social being, and that apart from
    society there is not even the individual."
Characters




   Elizabeth Bennet
-   The novel’s protagonist.
-   second daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bennet.
-   most intelligent and sensible
-   Her realization of Darcy’s essential goodness
    eventually triumphs over her initial prejudice
 Fitzwilliam Darcy
-He is Bingley's best friend and the nephew
  of Lady Catherine de Bourgh. He is a very
  wealthy, handsome, and proud bachelor.
-He is viewed as rude and conceited by all
  the inhabitants of Meryton.
-He is intelligent and honest but his pride
  causes him to look down on his social
  inferiors.
“….for almost all his actions may be traced
  to pride;-and pride has often been his best
  friend.”(George Wickham-vol. I ch.16)
-However, Darcy gradually tempers his
  class-consciousness and eventually falls
  in love with, and marries Elizabeth.
 Jane Bennet
-The eldest and most beautiful Bennet
  sister.
-Jane is more reserved and gentler than
  Elizabeth.
-She is later married to Mr.Bingley.
 Charles Bingley
Mr. Bingley is a wealthy,
  young bachelor who moves into the
  Bennet's neighborhood.
-His purchase of Netherfield, an estate near
  the Bennets, serves as the momentum for
  the novel.
-His friendly nature contrasts with Darcy’s
  initially rude behavior.
-He is uncaring about class differences.
 Mr. Bennet -
-The patriarch of the Bennet family
 -He has very little interest in the duties of
  polite society or in raising his daughters. For
  example, when Elizabeth rejects Mr. Collins’
  proposal, Mrs. Bennet asks for her
  husband’s opinion but he merely replies
  “…what am I to do on the occasion? It
  seems an hopeless business” (Mr. Bennet-
  vol. I ch.20)
-He finds his wife and his three youngest
  daughters to be unbearably silly, but
  Elizabeth and Jane make him proud.
 Mrs. Bennet -
-She is a foolish, noisy woman whose greatest
  aspiration is to have her five daughters married
  off.
-Mrs. Bennet does not approve of Elizabeth's logic
  and practicality, and Elizabeth is her least favorite
  daughter.
“Elizabeth was the least dear to her of all her
  children….”(vol. I-ch.18)
 Mary Bennet - The middle Bennet sister who is
  very bookish. She is the only one of the Bennet
  girls who remains unmarried.
 Catherine Bennet - The fourth Bennet sister.
  Like Lydia, she is girlishly enthralled with the
  soldiers.
 Lydia Bennet
-The youngest Bennet sister.
-She is gossipy, immature and self-involved. In the
  end she marries George Wickham.
 George Wickham
-A handsome, fortune-hunting militia
  officer.
-Wickham’s good looks and charm attract
  Elizabeth initially. He convinces her that
  he was greatly wronged by Mr. Darcy,
  but soon she learns of his true character,
  and realizes that she has been mistaken.
-Wickham later marries Lydia after they
  run away together.
 Mr. Collins
-A pompous clergyman who is Mr.
  Bennet's cousin and will inherit his
  estate when Mr. Bennet dies
 Charlotte Lucas - Elizabeth’s dear
  friend. Charlotte does not view love as
  the most vital component of a
  marriage and is more interested in
  having a comfortable home. Thus,
  when Mr. Collins proposes, she
  accepts.
 Sir William Lucas: He is Charlotte's
  father.
 Maria Lucas-is Charlotte's younger
  sister.
   Miss Bingley - Bingley’s snobbish sister.
    She bears inordinate disdain for
    Elizabeth’s middle-class background.
   Mrs. Hurst: She is Bingley's older, married
    sister who is just as two-faced as Miss
    Bingley.
   Mr. and Mrs. Gardiner - Mrs. Bennet’s
    brother and his wife. They are caring,
    nurturing, and full of common sense.
-   Mrs. Gardiner and Elizabeth are quite
    close because Elizabeth's own mother is
    silly while Mrs. Gardiner is more thoughtful
    and practical like Elizabeth.
-   Mr. Gardiner tries to find Lydia and
    Wickham when they have run away
    together.
 Lady Catherine de Bourgh - A rich, bossy
  noblewoman who is Darcy's wealthy aunt and
  Collins' patroness. She greatly illustrates class
  snobbery as she is a forceful lady who
  expects everyone to appreciate and follow her
  advice on every topic.
 Miss De Bourgh- Miss De Bourgh is Darcy's
  cousin and Lady Catherine's daughter.
 Georgiana Darcy - Darcy’s sister. She is
  immensely pretty and just as shy. She is wary
  because she was almost conned into eloping
  with Mr. Wickham, which would have been a
  grave mistake. She has great skills at playing
  the pianoforte.
 Colonel Fitzwilliam: Col. Fitzwilliam is
  Darcy's cousin and also co-guardian of Miss
  Darcy, Darcy's little sister.
Bibliography

 www.google.com/images
 http://en.wikipedia.org/

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Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice

  • 1. Book Review By Jane Austen Submitted by: Samia Arshad and Isbah Abdul Malik XI-G
  • 2. Jane Austen (16 December 1775 – 18 July 1817) was an English novelist whose works of romantic fiction, set among the landed gentry, earned her a place as one of the most widely read writers in English literature.  She was educated primarily by her father and older brothers as well as through her own reading.  Her works include Sense and Sensibility(1811), Pride and Prejudice (1813), Mansfield Park(1814) and Emma (1816). She also wrote Northanger Abbey and Persuasion, both published in 1818, and began writing Sanditon, but died before completing it.  Her plots mostly highlight the dependence of women on marriage to secure social standing and economic security.  She earned little fame during her lifetime but the publication in 1869 of her nephew's A Memoir of Jane Austen introduced her to a wider public and it was by 1940s that she became widely accepted in academia as a great English writer.
  • 3. SETTING In the story the readers are taken to different towns and places but the story is set in England at large. Following are the places discussed in the novel.  Longbourn: The Bennet family estate near the town of Meryton. It will be inherited by Mr. Collins when Mr. Bennet dies.  Netherfield: Bingley's estate near Longbourn and near the town of Meryton.  Meryton: Town near Longbourn where Mrs.Phillips lives and the soldiers are
  • 4. Rosings: Lady Catherine De Bourgh's estate in Hunsford. Mr. Collins has a parish near this estate, and Elizabeth visits Rosings while she is visiting Charlotte.  Pemberley: Mr. Darcy's estate in Derbyshire.  Hertfordshire: The county, where Longbourn, Netherfield, and Meryton are all located.  Hunsford: The town where Charlotte and Mr. Collins live.  Brighton: The town to which the soldiers from Meryton are moved.  Derbyshire: The county where Mr. Darcy's estate, Pemberly, is located.
  • 5.
  • 6. As said in the words of Mary at the beginning of the novel, "human nature is particularly prone to [pride]" (Volume I, Chapter 5). In the novel, pride prevents the characters from seeing the truth of a situation and from achieving happiness in life.  Pride is one of the main barriers that creates an obstacle to Elizabeth and Darcy's marriage. Darcy's pride in his position in society leads him initially to scorn anyone outside of his own social circle.  Elizabeth's vanity clouds her judgment, making her prone to think ill of Darcy and to think well of Wickham.  In the end, Elizabeth's rebukes of Darcy help him to realize his fault and to change accordingly, as demonstrated in his genuinely friendly treatment of the Gardiners, whom he previously would have scorned because of their low social class.  Darcy's letter shows Elizabeth that her judgments were wrong and she realizes that they were based on vanity, not on reason.
  • 7.  Pride and prejudice are intimately related in the novel. As critic A. Walton Litz comments, "in Pride and Prejudice one cannot equate Darcy with Pride, or Elizabeth with Prejudice; Darcy's pride of place is founded on social prejudice, while Elizabeth's initial prejudice against him is rooted in pride of her own quick perceptions."  However, Darcy tries to overcome his prejudice as it is demonstrated when he treats the Gardiners with great civility. The Gardiners are a much lower class than Darcy, because Mr. Gardiner is a lawyer and must practice a trade to earn a living, rather than living off of the interest of an estate as gentlemen do.  From the beginning of the novel Elizabeth prides herself on her keen ability for perception. Yet this supposed ability is often lacking, as in Elizabeth's judgments of Darcy and Wickham.
  • 8. Austen is critical of the gender injustices present in 19th century English society.  The novel demonstrates how women such as Charlotte need to marry simply in order to gain financial security.  The entailment of the Longbourn estate is an extreme hardship on the Bennet family, and is quite obviously unjust. The entailment of Mr. Bennet's estate leaves his daughters in a poor financial situation which both requires them to marry and makes it more difficult to marry well.  Clearly, Austen believes that woman are at least as intelligent and capable as men, and considers their inferior status in society to be unjust. She herself went against convention by remaining single and earning a living through her novels.
  • 9. Austen portrays the family as primarily responsible for the intellectual and moral education of children. Mr. and Mrs. Bennet's failure to provide this education for their daughters leads to the utter shamelessness, foolishness, and immorality of Lydia.  Elizabeth and Jane have managed to develop virtue and strong characters in spite of the negligence of their parents, perhaps through the help of their studies and the good influence of Mr. and Mrs. Gardiner, who are the only relatives in the novel that take a serious concern in the girls' well-being and provide sound guidance.  Elizabeth and Jane are constantly forced to put up with the foolishness and poor judgment of their mother and the sarcastic indifference of their father.  Even when Elizabeth advises her father not to allow Lydia to go to Brighton, he ignores the advice because he thinks it would be too difficult to deal with Lydia's complaining.  The result is the scandal of Lydia's elopement with Wickham.
  • 10. Considerations of class are omnipresent in the novel.  Darcy's inordinate pride is based on his extreme class-consciousness. Yet eventually he sees that factors other than wealth determine who truly belongs in the aristocracy.  Those such as Miss Bingley and Mrs. Hurst, who are born into the aristocracy, are idle, mean-spirited and annoying, Mr. and Mrs. Gardiner are not members of the aristocracy in terms of wealth or birth but are natural aristocrats by virtue of their intelligence, good-breeding and virtue.  The comic formality of Mr. Collins and his obsequious relationship with Lady Catherine serve as a satire class consciousness and social formalities.
  • 11. The novel portrays a world in which society takes an interest in the private virtue of its members.  When Lydia elopes with Wickham, therefore, it is scandal to the whole society and an injury to entire Bennet family.  Darcy considers his failure to expose the wickedness of Wickham's character to be a breach of his social duty because if Wickham's true character had been known others would not have been so easily deceived by him.  While Austen is critical of society's ability to judge properly, as demonstrated especially in their judgments of Wickham and Darcy, she does believe that society has a crucial role in promoting virtue.  Austen has a profound sense that individuals are social beings and that their happiness is found through relationships with others.  According to critic Richard Simpson, Austen has a "thorough consciousness that man is a social being, and that apart from society there is not even the individual."
  • 12. Characters  Elizabeth Bennet - The novel’s protagonist. - second daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bennet. - most intelligent and sensible - Her realization of Darcy’s essential goodness eventually triumphs over her initial prejudice
  • 13.  Fitzwilliam Darcy -He is Bingley's best friend and the nephew of Lady Catherine de Bourgh. He is a very wealthy, handsome, and proud bachelor. -He is viewed as rude and conceited by all the inhabitants of Meryton. -He is intelligent and honest but his pride causes him to look down on his social inferiors. “….for almost all his actions may be traced to pride;-and pride has often been his best friend.”(George Wickham-vol. I ch.16) -However, Darcy gradually tempers his class-consciousness and eventually falls in love with, and marries Elizabeth.
  • 14.  Jane Bennet -The eldest and most beautiful Bennet sister. -Jane is more reserved and gentler than Elizabeth. -She is later married to Mr.Bingley.  Charles Bingley Mr. Bingley is a wealthy, young bachelor who moves into the Bennet's neighborhood. -His purchase of Netherfield, an estate near the Bennets, serves as the momentum for the novel. -His friendly nature contrasts with Darcy’s initially rude behavior. -He is uncaring about class differences.
  • 15.  Mr. Bennet - -The patriarch of the Bennet family -He has very little interest in the duties of polite society or in raising his daughters. For example, when Elizabeth rejects Mr. Collins’ proposal, Mrs. Bennet asks for her husband’s opinion but he merely replies “…what am I to do on the occasion? It seems an hopeless business” (Mr. Bennet- vol. I ch.20) -He finds his wife and his three youngest daughters to be unbearably silly, but Elizabeth and Jane make him proud.
  • 16.  Mrs. Bennet - -She is a foolish, noisy woman whose greatest aspiration is to have her five daughters married off. -Mrs. Bennet does not approve of Elizabeth's logic and practicality, and Elizabeth is her least favorite daughter. “Elizabeth was the least dear to her of all her children….”(vol. I-ch.18)  Mary Bennet - The middle Bennet sister who is very bookish. She is the only one of the Bennet girls who remains unmarried.  Catherine Bennet - The fourth Bennet sister. Like Lydia, she is girlishly enthralled with the soldiers.  Lydia Bennet -The youngest Bennet sister. -She is gossipy, immature and self-involved. In the end she marries George Wickham.
  • 17.  George Wickham -A handsome, fortune-hunting militia officer. -Wickham’s good looks and charm attract Elizabeth initially. He convinces her that he was greatly wronged by Mr. Darcy, but soon she learns of his true character, and realizes that she has been mistaken. -Wickham later marries Lydia after they run away together.  Mr. Collins -A pompous clergyman who is Mr. Bennet's cousin and will inherit his estate when Mr. Bennet dies
  • 18.  Charlotte Lucas - Elizabeth’s dear friend. Charlotte does not view love as the most vital component of a marriage and is more interested in having a comfortable home. Thus, when Mr. Collins proposes, she accepts.  Sir William Lucas: He is Charlotte's father.  Maria Lucas-is Charlotte's younger sister.
  • 19. Miss Bingley - Bingley’s snobbish sister. She bears inordinate disdain for Elizabeth’s middle-class background.  Mrs. Hurst: She is Bingley's older, married sister who is just as two-faced as Miss Bingley.  Mr. and Mrs. Gardiner - Mrs. Bennet’s brother and his wife. They are caring, nurturing, and full of common sense. - Mrs. Gardiner and Elizabeth are quite close because Elizabeth's own mother is silly while Mrs. Gardiner is more thoughtful and practical like Elizabeth. - Mr. Gardiner tries to find Lydia and Wickham when they have run away together.
  • 20.  Lady Catherine de Bourgh - A rich, bossy noblewoman who is Darcy's wealthy aunt and Collins' patroness. She greatly illustrates class snobbery as she is a forceful lady who expects everyone to appreciate and follow her advice on every topic.  Miss De Bourgh- Miss De Bourgh is Darcy's cousin and Lady Catherine's daughter.  Georgiana Darcy - Darcy’s sister. She is immensely pretty and just as shy. She is wary because she was almost conned into eloping with Mr. Wickham, which would have been a grave mistake. She has great skills at playing the pianoforte.  Colonel Fitzwilliam: Col. Fitzwilliam is Darcy's cousin and also co-guardian of Miss Darcy, Darcy's little sister.