Rebecca By Daphne Du Maurier: An Analysis

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Everybody loves a good ol’ story where the husband turns out to be a murderer and an evil housekeeper haunts a newlywed wife with the memories of the previous one. This is a fairly original idea thought up by Daphne du Maurier. She was raised in England with ancestry in the art of entertainment. Growing up with both parents in the field of acting and a grandfather who wrote comics, it’s no surprise that she was able to come up with imaginative stories (“Rebecca” 291). Daphne du Maurier wrote the vengeful love story, Rebecca, because of the Victorian Era and her troubled marriage, both which were significant influences on her life and writing.
The Victorian Era was classified by a strict set of rules that every upstanding citizen must follow. These rules can be seen in “the behavior between sexes, tea at four-thirty each day, and a fascination with wealth that was suppressed by the good taste not to talk about it” …show more content…

This marriage is based on Daphne du Maurier’s real-life marriage and its issues. The characters’ behavior can be explained by the proper etiquette in the Victorian Era. This novel demonstrates some flaws in human nature. Mr. de Winter killed Rebecca because she represented manipulation. Only Mr. de Winter knew the actual Rebecca while everyone else saw the facade she put on to make herself seem likeable. He could no longer go along with the charade that made them seem like an ideal couple while she treated him like dirt when they were alone. She learned the hard way that fooling people to like her left her with a cruel heart and inevitable her death. Mrs. Danvers also ended up learning a lesson when she refused to leave her memories in Manderley when the house went up in flames. She died in that fire because she was unable to realize sometimes the past has to stay in the past but on the bright side she can finally be with her favorite person,

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