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Comparative Study: Letters to Alice and Pride and Prejudice

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Analyse how the central values portrayed in Pride and Prejudice are creatively reshaped in Letters to Alice.

The two texts, Letters to Alice and Pride and Prejudice, mirror and contrast the central values shared and explored by evaluating them; presenting them against Jane Austen's context and that of Fay Weldon. Mirroring Austen's novel, Weldon presents the central values for women such as the social values of moral behaviour, independence, and, literary values of reading and writing, from Pride and Prejudice and adapts them to a 20th Century context. Weldon's novel's subtitle, On First Reading Jane Austen, suggests that the novel should serve as a filter to assist readers. The implication of this is that Weldon enables her readers …show more content…

While Weldon attempts to reshape the audience's perception of Mrs Bennett who "made a fool of herself in public, husband-hunting on her girls' behalf," by sympathising with her, Jane Austen expresses a somewhat satirical tone when writing of Mrs Bennet, by using hyperbolic statements such as the constant reference to, "My poor nerves!" Austen was aware of the necessity for marriage in female lives and therefore satirises, not the hierarchy structure of classes and social status, but rather the individual behaviours present in society. Mrs Bennet is a clear example of this whereby her hysteria hints at contextual obsessions with wealth. This idea of the significance of marriage is supported through the character Charlotte Lucas. Austen constructs Charlotte Lucas as a character who does not think “highly of either men or matrimony”, and hence she marries Mr Collins despite not loving him, to ensure her financial security and elevate her position within society. In Letters to Alice, Weldon asserts that before reading Jane Austen, Alice “must understand... the world in which Jane Austen was born.” Weldon assists the responder to comprehend the significance of marriage as a theme in Pride and Prejudice, by highlighting the differences between the contemporary value assigned to marriage and the value assigned in Austen’s time. She satirically

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