Jane Austen Women's Oppression

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Jane Austen’s novels show realistic interpretations of eighteenth-century English culture. In her novels, Austen presents several issues of English society taking into her consideration, especially the problems that women face in their society. She discusses different issues such as the inequality between males and females in education, inheritance, and marriage. She also demonstrates that women have limited financial opportunities in their society. British women only have two choices in order to secure their lives either working as governesses or marrying wealthy men. Austen illustrates these issues in her works seeking to find solutions that may give English women a wider space and opportunity to present their existence in their society. Even though women obtain a secondary position in English society, Austen portrays the …show more content…

In these three novels, Austen demonstrates the arbitrary social norms, traditions, and laws of English society that create class distinction, women’s oppression, and gender inequality. Austen also portrays the heroines of these novels, Elizabeth, in Pride and Prejudice, Elinor, in Sense and Sensibility, and Emma, of the novel by the same name, as significant characters who deviate from the norm and rebel against their old traditions. This paper mainly concentrates on two areas that show English women’s suffering in the eighteenth century. The marriage plot and education are the most important issues that have got not only Austen’s attention but also critics’ notice of that era. Through reading Austen’s novels, readers can also realize these two problems and women’s negligence. British society does not consider women’s options and rights as important issues. I argue that Austen’s novel exposes women’s inferiority through courtship and marriage and educational system to reform women's status in English

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