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Friday, February 15, 2019

The Lovable Mrs. Bennet of Pride and Prejudice Essay -- Pride and Preju

The Lovable Mrs. bennet of ostentation and Prejudice The general icon of Austens novels, which critic D. W. Harding says relieved him of any desire to read them, is that they offer readers a humorous refuge from an uncertain world. In his article Regulated Hatred An Aspect in the Work of Jane Austen, Harding claims that this impression is misleading and that Jane Austen is actu bothy very critical of her society, covertly expressing downright hatred for certain members of it by means of caricature. Mrs. Bennet, from Austens Pride and Prejudice, is hotshot of these comic monsters. Harding claims that in order to view Mrs. Bennet as anything other(a) than utterly detested by Austen one must ignore this Austens outline of her at the end of Chapter One She was a woman of mean understanding, light information, and an uncertain temper.1 Actually, Austens Mrs. Bennet is much more complex than Harding acknowledges. Austens initial summary notwithstanding, Pride and Prej udice even looks at Mrs. Bennet forgivingly. Her look is often provoked by her environment both her society and her family. Because she helps, or tries to help, her family, Mrs. Bennets ludicrous actions back even be seen as lovable. Mrs. Bennets society and family objurgate her to a series of conventional roles. Mrs. Bennet snags a husband by playing the role of the fair-humored, pretty young woman. Mr. Bennet also believes that good looks will make a good wife, and he marries her. However, once she and Mr. Bennet take off their courting masks and Mr. Bennet discovers her weak understanding and narrow mind, which had very early in their marriage put an end to all real affection for her (155),... ...Mrs. Bennet in a critical and funny, just understanding way, Austen becomes the satirist that Harding claims she is not. As a satirist, Austen helps us to deal with the Mrs. Bennets in our world. While exposing their weaknesses, we can forgive them and even try to help them. We can also, by understanding how a Mrs. Bennet comes to act like Mrs. Bennet, throw our sisters and ourselves from becoming like her. Notes 1. D. W. Harding, Regulating Hatred An Aspect in the Work of Jane Austen, in Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice, ed. Donald Gray (New York and London Norton, 2001), 297-298. 2. All references to Jane Austens Pride and Prejudice are from the Norton life-sustaining 3rd edition, ed. Donald Gray (New York and London Norton, 2001). 3. Harding, 297. 4. Harding, 297.

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