Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice Essay

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Pride and Prejudice Essay: Own Prompt #8-The Obscurities of the Victorian Society

In Pride and Prejudice, Jane Austen satirizes the superficially built society in Victorian Era by pointing out the flaws with the recurring themes of marriage versus love and gender roles through dramatic irony and character relations.

All relationships and the idea of true love tend to be obscured by this materialistic society that is based on wealth, power, title, and connections. Jane Austen constantly paints the Victorian scene of the socialite women gathering to discuss about the idea of marriage as Charlotte Lucas points out that “there is much gratitude or vanity in every form of attachment that it is not safe to leave any to itself…very few of us who have heart enough to be really in love without encouragement.” Charlotte reveals that their society’s image on marriage has flaws and impurities. The theme is even more emphasized with the dramatic irony that even though Charlotte clearly sees the obscurity of society’s marriage, she herself doesn’t want to disappoint her parents and marries Mr. Collins in order to be financially stable. Marriage has become more of a way of an economic opportunity or embedded with self-promoting ulterior motives, rather than the act of true love and companionship. Another relationship that expands the dark side of the common Victorian marriage relation is the growing apart of Mr. and Mrs. Bennet. When they were young, full of life and beauty they married each other for both looks and fortune. However as they grew older, needing to take care of their new socialite daughters, beauty and the fun phase of youth faded away and all was left was money and no depth of their relationship. Their marriage was based on ...

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...cy crawls back in humiliation and toning down his pride as a man in pursuit for not some weak, dim-witted, and superficial female, but instead for a strong and independent individual. With Jane Austen’s character development for Mr. Darcy in change of values for the ideal women, it puts the dignified feminist women on a pedestal as the more appealing figure, in contrast to the stereotypical materialistic Victorian woman.

Jane Austen satirizes and reveals the corrupt and distorted social values in the Victorian Era. Expanding on this idea, the two themes of marriage versus true love and women’s roles in society, Austen criticizes and ridicules the shallow life of the 1800s. A society full of superficial means needs to be careful in obscuring social views, especially for the wealthy not to base the meaning of life and ideals on the frivolous, gaudy materialisms.

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