Elizabeth Bennet Essay

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    normally make grand companions for the hero and are mostly always found together. In Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen, Elizabeth and Jane Bennet are excellent examples of the heroine and confidante pair by being foil characters, confiding in each other, and giving advice. Foil characters are somewhat similar but are used to highlight the differences between the two being used. Elizabeth and Jane are both very sensible and quite smart. They have learned more from their father instead of their mother because

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    such as Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth Bennet change their characteristics in the course of the story. Elizabeth, herself asserts that people are always changing; a feat that makes them interesting, a statement that is echoed by her mother. Elizabeth reaches a turning point in her life after she reads the letter from Darcy, which makes her study her own character and subsequently discover her mistakes. The changing of Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth seems to be a fantasy since Elizabeth at last gets to marry for

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    that people love who they love. However, during the time in which Pride and Prejudice was set, there were arranged marriages and women marrying simply so they will not become an old maid. Love rarely had much to do with it, but luckily Jane and Elizabeth see their true worth and decide to marry for love and respect. The world in which the author was living in during the time a work was being written says a lot about what the author’s intention was. Austen came up with a draft of Pride and Prejudice

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    demonstrates the different kinds of these chracteristics through each character. Lizzy, Jane, and Darcy are all completely different characters who show their pride and prejudice in completely different ways. Since the very beginning of the book, Elizabeth Bennet, who is also known as Lizzy, was very quick to judge, and her prejudice led her to believe in the wrong people. When Lizzy met Mr. Wickham she instantly believed his story about Darcy; perhaps it was because she already disliked him. He told

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    In the story, Elizabeth had grown up in a lifetime when marriage was the most important thing for a young woman. Being the second eldest daughter of five, she was put under constant pressure to find a husband and ease her parents and herself from financial strain. Most

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    In the novel “Pride and Prejudice”, by Jane Austen, Elizabeth Bennet, an opinionated, middle classed woman, falls in love with Mr. Darcy, a rich man that she previously hated. Mr. Darcy looks past her lower social class and lets himself love her. The novel examines the issues of feminism, and post structural challenges and the idea that women are more limited to social obligations. In Feminist criticism, the lens allows the reader to see how different races and genders are distinguished differently

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    When people think of gender discrimination, they probably think of things like wage gaps or one gender believing they are better than the other. Compared to the gender discrimination in the past, however, the discrimination today is not nearly as bad. American women were not allowed to vote until 1920. Many places viewed women as property or less important than men. Pride and Prejudice is set in a time where the latter examples of gender discrimination were common. To fully understand the book’s

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    progress both socially and economically. "It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune” (vol 1 chapter 1). The reason why this quote is significant in the context of the novel, is because, the protagonist Elizabeth has to get married in order to remain accepted and respected in the social class. The quote is a confirmation that women in the society were unquestionably dependent on marriage and this has advanced to such an extent that all wealthy bachelors

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    Longbourn had being excitement with the arrival of a wealthy young gentleman, Charles Bingley, who will move to Netherfield plantation. In her home, Mrs.Bennet was very happy and talked to her husband, Mr.Bennet, that she wanted to meet her sons, Jane, Elizabeth, Lydia, Kitty and Mary to Mr.Bingley and hoped that one of her children would be married by Mr.Bingley. Without telling his family, Mr.Bennet visited Bingley and Mr.Bennet asked all his children and his wife when the next ball is scheduled and promised

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    voice, her address and expressions,” (Austen 29). On Elizabeth’s decision, to walk three miles alone to see Jane, her mother responds against it, because Elizabeth “will not be fit to be seen” (Austen 24). When Elizabeth reaches Netherfield all dirty from her walk, she does not get admired by the sisters of Bingley. Instead in their eyes Elizabeth appears to possess “abominable sort of conceited independence” (Austen 26) and they went on to criticise her dirty and messy appearance after the walk.

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