English, asked by vishal9514, 1 year ago

how does jane austen treat love and marriage in pride and prejudice

Answers

Answered by Aaaayush
12
Pride and Prejudice is the most well known of Jane Austen’s books. Pride and Prejudice was first distributed in 1813. The first novel was composed amid 1796-1797 under the title ‘initial introductions’ and was as a trade of letters. The immense quality of her books is the social perceptions they contain: Austen utilized a solid feeling of incongruity in her scrutinize of highborn estrangement and the demands of the nouveau riche. With a deliberate scornful eye she could outline social mores and the restrictions endured by ladies in Regency England. The books of the seventeenth century were composed thusly that they concentrated primarily on the blue-blooded class and disregarded the white collar class and the lower class.
Jane Austen’s ‘Pride and Prejudice’ recounts the tale of the underlying false impressions between Elizabeth Bennet and the haughty Darcy, which are dealt with in the long run, and the issues of marriage amid Jane Austen’s period. The tone of the novel is light, ironical and clear. The opening line of the novel itself abridges the demeanor of individuals towards marriage amid Jane Austen’s period. ‘I do guarantee you that I am not one of those young women (if such young women there are) who are so challenging as to chance their joy on the possibility of being asked a moment time.
I am consummately genuine in my refusal. You couldn’t make me cheerful, and I am persuaded that I am the last lady on the planet who could make you so. Charlotte Lucas however chooses practical security over adoration. This marriage is appeared to be all the more a commonly profitable course of action between Mr. Collins and Charlotte Lucas and is another unsuccessful marriage in the book since it depends on cash and not love between the two individuals. Charlotte debases herself according to her closest companion Elizabeth by wedding Mr. Collins ‘I trust you will be happy with what I have done. I am not sentimental, you know; I never was.

I ask just an agreeable home; and considering Mr. Collin’s character, associations and circumstances in life, I am persuaded that my odds of satisfaction with him as reasonable as the vast majority can gloat on entering the marriage state.’ beneficiary marriage depends on adoration , regard , shared understanding , and self-understanding . Despite the fact that their connection starts with satisfaction , bias , and misconception ; it passes many stages as ” it changes over from full scorn to finish esteem and satisfaction”* . For Darcy , Elizabeth is not any more the lady who is “not nice sufficiently looking to entice (him)”* as he has found that she seems to be “a lady deserving of being pleased”*.


thanks ;)
Similar questions