Stereotypes In Jane Austen's A Vindication Of The Rights Of Women

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On the surface, Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice is a romantic story of love overcoming varying vices. However, Austen takes care to feature very complicated characters to counteract the predictability of such a love story. In fact, Austen is often praised for her many-layered male and female characters. Austen creates detailed women who both follow and disregard the stereotypical concepts of femininity in varying social classes. However, she also creates complicated men who both fulfill and shirk the duties of husbands and men. In order to create such complicated characters, Austen seems to employ the duties and stereotypes of individuals as outlined by Mary Wollstonecraft in her work of A Vindication of the Rights of Women. Wollstonecraft …show more content…

and Mrs. Bennet individually. Mrs. Bennet portrays exactly the stereotypical woman Wollstonecraft describes in A Vindication of the Rights of Women. Wollstonecraft aims her work at middle class women, such as Mrs. Bennet and attempts to “convince them, that the soft phrases, susceptibility of heart, delicacy of sentiment, and refinement of taste, are almost synonymous with epithets of weakness,” (Wollstonecraft, 73). Austen portrays Mrs. Bennet as a strong woman, who chooses to conceal her strong nature from even herself, saying “when she was discontented, she fancied herself nervous,” (7). Mrs. Bennet chooses the word nervous to describe herself, due the idea that being nervous is more feminine than being discontented or angry. Mrs. Bennet, another product of a lack of education “was a woman of mean understanding, little information, and uncertain temper,” and as such “the business of her life was to get her daughters married; its solace was visiting and news,” (Austen, 7). Mrs. Bennet is so obsessed with marrying her children off, she neglects their wants. Wollstonecraft would attribute Mrs. Bennett’s neglect of her children to this lack of education. Wollstonecraft asserts that to expect a foolish women to be a good mother would be just “as wise to expect corn from tares, or figs from thistles,” (280). Due to Mrs. Bennet’s acceptance of her stereotypical feminine role, …show more content…

Bennet fails to fulfill the duties assigned to a husband and father that are necessary to create a self-sufficient society. Unlike Mrs. Bennet, Mr. Bennet, as a man, more than likely had access to education and has more of an ability to provide for his children in the way Wollstonecraft outlines. However, he fails to do so, and allows his children to depend on marriage for provision rather than teaching them self-sufficiency. Wollstonecraft equates fatherhood to God’s role in humanities life saying “He—the common father, wounds but to heal,” (Wollstonecraft, 270). However, Mr. Bennet fails to heal after he has wounded. Instead he acts selfishly for his own amusement. Mr. Bennet encourages Mr. Collins eccentricities saying “his cousin was just as absurd as he had hoped,” instead of attempting to resolve the issue of the entail that forces his children to rely on marriage as their savior (Austen, 66). Mr. Bennet also encourages Elizabeth’s love for Mr. Wickham, not for her own benefit, but so she would be “crossed in love,” as her sister, which Mr. Bennet would find amusing (Austen, 123). In combination to failing his children, Mr. Bennet fails to fulfill the duties Wollstonecraft assigns to the role of husband. Instead of choosing a wife for her cleverness as Wollstonecraft suggests, he was “captivated by youth and beauty,” of the young Mrs. Bennet (Austen, 203). He consequently marries her, without considering the long term effects of her personality. After

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