Emma

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    Emma Woodhouse is handsome, clever, and rich, with a comfortable home and happy disposition and has lived twenty-one years and has very little stress in her life. But what if Emma was taken from her Georgian-Regency England and placed in the Twentieth century; would she be just as accomplished or would she just be a silly little girl. Jane Austin herself stated that “I am going to take a heroine whom no one but myself will much like”. The narrator of the book Emma also describes her as being spoiled

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    Emma advises the innocent Harriet in virtually all things, including the people with whom she should interact. She suggests that Harriet not spend time with the Martins, a local family of farmers whose son, Robert, is interested in Harriet. Instead, Emma plans to play matchmaker for Harriet and Mr. Elton, the vicar of the church in Highbury. Emma seems to have some success in her attempts to bring together Harriet Smith and

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    Emma is set in Highbury, a countryside town in Surrey, England. As is the case with many of Jane Austen's works, this town is almost suffocatingly compact. Of course, a common habit of people living in small towns is to talk about the lives of other people constantly. Interestingly, Austen uses this habit to do many things, including driving the development of many relationships between characters; such as the tenuous relationship between Emma Woodhouse, and Jane Fairfax. As a result of relentlessly

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    classic novel Emma (1816) with both texts comparable as they use satire to address similar values. The shift in context enables the texts to reinforce the values of Regency England or 1990s Beverly Hills. Heckerling subverts and appropriates the original text to a cinematic context, through this she can comment on American society thus invoking new meaning to the ideas in Emma. Both

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    Jane Austen’s Emma follows the life of an overindulged, upper class young woman who, after enduring a crisis brought on by her own pride, is transformed from callow and vain, to a state of mental and emotional maturity. On first reading, the audience may perceive Emma’s actions as a repression of feelings, but upon closer inspection one can see that she is not suppressing her emotions but simply does not have the level of self-awareness that would allow her to clarify the difference between right

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    Although he criticises Emma for her faults and occasional misconduct, he does so with love and gentility. It is thought that Austen herself very much approved of Knightley as she makes it so that he is always right when it comes to the judgement of other characters. The

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    Emma, by Jane Austen, focuses on the life of Emma Woodhouse, heiress to the wealth and importance of her father’s mansion, Hartfield. The story takes place sometime in eighteenth century England in the populous village of Highbury, where Emma lives with her father in their mansion, Hartfield. In this book, both the protagonist and the antagonist turn out to be the same person, Emma. Emma Woodhouse is beautiful, clever, talented, and the youngest of two daughters born to her father. The effect of

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    Analysis of Emma by Jane Austen In Jane Austen’s novel, Emma, protagonist Emma avoids her own transformation by her attempts to transform others. However, Emma experiences her coming-of-age through the stable characters of those around her. Austen reveals how self-transformation is necessary in maturing and establishing self-awareness. Emma Woodhouse possesses qualities that many would envy: beauty, intelligence, wealth, and youth. However, the positive aspects of Emma are equally contrasted

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    worldviews of a person. This is evident in Emma, as Austen uses a unique narrative style to illustrate the power of societal control. The plot of the novel focuses mainly on the theme of strategic matchmaking, however it can also serve as a catalyst to demonstrate the idea of societal authority presented in the novel. There is an emphasis on the Evangelical ideas of strength in community, and in the Lockean ideas of the social order. THESIS The theme of Emma is expressed through word games, and parallels

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    Essay Feminism and Jane Austen's Emma

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    in social status was not popular by that time, author can only through literature to express her thought and discontented about society. Jane Austen’s Emma advocates a concept about the equality of men and women. Also satirizes women would depend on marriage in exchange to make a living or money in that era. By the effect of society bourgeois, Emma has little self-arrogant. She is a middle class that everyone could admire, “Young, pretty, rich and clever”, she has whatever she needs. She disdains

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