introducing… pride and prejudice. on your paper… o how do you form judgments about strangers? o...
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On your paper…
OHow do you form judgments about strangers?
OHow do you “read” people you’ve never met before when you see them for the first time?
Jane AustenO Child number 6 in
a clergy family of 7 children
O Born December 1775
O Died July 1817 at age 41
O Wrote first book at 14
O On Austen
More Austen FactsO Father died leaving
family unprovided forO She and Cassandra
lived at the courtesy of relatives
O Earned only 700 pounds during lifetime from her writing
O Wrote 6 novelsO Considered the Shak
espeare of the novel
Regency EnglandO 1790-1830sO George, prince
of Wales, regent on behalf of King George III between 1810-1820
O Napoleonic Wars ongoing til Waterloo in 1815
Regency FashionO Also neo-
Classical; revival of ancient Grecian and Roman styles
O Cotton crops ensured England was able to remain a fashion capital
Women’s FashionsO Neo-classical
simplicity meant bye-bye corsets, hello Grecian-style gowns
O Hair was worn au naturel…no more wigs
Regency EtiquetteO Impeccable
manners and spotless reputations ruled the day
O Specific behavior dictated for every situation
Some ExamplesO Unmarried women under 30 should
never been seen with a man without a chaperone
O A lady never called upon a gentlemanO Gentlemen were free to call upon
ladiesO Going upstairs, a gentlemen preceded
a lady; going downstairs, he followed (so as not to see her ankle)
O "...your dress should correspond with the station you hold in society."
Regency Etiquette
O How would YOU survive in Regency England?
Pride and PrejudiceO Published in 1813O Wrote first version
in 1796: called it First Impressions
O Took 16 years to get published as was not fashionable
O Gothic novels were fashionable (The Scarlet Letter, Frankenstein)
Novel of MannersO Realistic: complex characters
with mixed motives who interact with many other characters and undergo plausible, everyday experiences
O Focuses on the customs, conversation, and ways of thinking and valuing of the upper social class
Social Class and $$$ in P&P
O Novel takes place among the landed gentry: inherited money
O Characters’ worth is discussed in terms of inheritance and yearly income…so a person with 10,000 a year is worth twice as much as a person with 5,000 a year
Working Classes at the Time
Bottom of the ladder: the poor
O Few were literateO Next level: The
farmersO Higher up: The
servantsO Marriage: the one
way for a woman to possibly move up a class
Marriage
O Cost moneyO Dowry
O Only 30 % of women over 20 married
O Your parents’ property went to your brothers
O Women inherited only through husbands
O To marry was a great prize and a woman’s aim
O Austen never married.O At 30 she became a
spinster (began wearing a cap)
Enlightenment Philosophy
O“It is evident to any one who takes a survey of the objects of human knowledge, that they are either IDEAS actually imprinted on the senses; or else such as are perceived by attending to the passions and operations of the mind; or lastly, ideas formed by help of memory and imagination….”
-Berkeley, Principles and Dialogues
Declaration of Independence
“We hold these truths to be self evident, that all men are created equal….”-Jefferson
David HumeOThe great variety of Taste, as well as of opinion, which prevails in the world, is too obvious not to have fallen under every one's observation.
– Hume, Of the Standard of Taste
Austen’s First LinesODo a close reading of the first 2 sentences of P&P.OWhat does Austen accomplish by echoing these philosophical tracts in her opening line as she does?
OWhat is the tone she creates and how does she create it?
OWhat does it set us up to expect?
VOLUME 1: To consider…
OHow do various characters think about/define marriage?
OWhy do people marry in this society?
OHow do people in this novel form judgments?
To get us started today…
OHow to Become a Modern Day Mr. Darcy
OMr. Darcy Statue in Hyde Park, London
Jane Austen and Satire
OFirst sentence of Pride and Prejudice: “It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife.”
Characteristics of her fiction
O Omniscient narrator (third person)O Latin: omnis (all) and scire (to know). An
omniscient narrator knows all about the characters.
O Mr. Bennet was so odd a mixture of quick parts, sarcastic humour, reserve, and caprice, that the experience of three and twenty years had been insufficient to make his wife understand his character. Her mind was less difficult to develop. She was a woman of mean understanding, little information, and uncertain temper. When she was discontented, she fancied herself nervous. The business of her life was to get her daughters married; its solace was visiting and news.
Pioneered Free Indirect Speech
ORemains in past tense and third person, yet the words belong to the character rather than the narrator (it’s the character’s voice). O Indirect means no quotation marks and
no “she thought” explicitly marking the thought process as the character’s.
O Has a dramatically ironic effect because we know more than the character does.
O Example: “She hardly knew how to suppose that she could be an object of admiration to so great a man; and yet that he should look at her because he disliked her was still more strange.” P&P, Ch. 10
Characterization: How it is done
OBy other characters, and in relation to how we feel about them
OThrough their “own” wordsOThrough the omniscient
narratorOExample: P&P, Ch. 1
Ch. 1: AnalysisO By the end of Chapter 1, Austen
has defined some of the primary themes of the novel and set up some of the basic relationships between characters.
O Work as a group to: O List the themes that you see in
Chapter 1, and…O Explain what you learn about the
characters and how you learn it
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