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Gender In Jane Austen's Northanger Abbey

Decent Essays

By exploring the connections between the two texts, the responder’s understanding of the values and attitudes of the time is enhanced. J. Lovering’s feminist interpretation of Jane Austen in the film Miss Austen Regrets, explores the confining nature of gender and how it shapes female relationships, to expose Austen’s inability to conform to the expectations of women in 19th Century England. Upon this reflection, the responder’s understanding of Northanger Abbey, and the values and attitudes it explores through satire, is deepened by the understanding that the satire in the novel serves as a vessel for Austen’s criticism of her own society.
Austen’s social context exposes the underlying themes concerning gender in Northanger Abbey, exposing …show more content…

Henry’s shocked, “dearest Miss Moreland, what ideas have you been admitting?” not only crushes Catherine’s “visions of romance” and humiliates her of all the gothic tendencies she had entertained throughout the novel, but it also serves to humble the reader; who presumably acted as eagerly as Catherine did in seeing the superficial and assuming that General Tilney was a terrible villain. However this overt satire of gothic literature and its heroines, who “plain as any” Catherine openly defies, also acts as a platform where Austen can criticise her society and how they value texts that openly objectify and demean women to superficial creatures. When Austen says, “gentlemen read better books,” in Miss Austen Regrets, the intertextual link in her words and the use of lighting and shadow elongates her face and emphasise the bitterness of her words. Allowing the responder to understand Austen’s own awareness of the confines that she as a female author experienced in the patriarchal and classist society of 19th Century England. This translates to Northanger Abbey when the mockable Catherine says, “if I could not be persuaded into doing what I thought wrong, I never will be tricked into it.” Revealing a deep level of integrity and honesty that the more socially accepted Isabella seems to lack. Austen mocks Catherine as a means of openly addressing the contemptuous nature of gothic literature, however she imbues Catherine with qualities integral to a wholesome human being to showcase to the responder, especially in the context of 19th Century England, that society’s gender roles not only shapes female relationships negatively but also shapes the characterisation of women in literature which contributes to the misogynistic mindset of the time and the

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