Title: Pride and Prejudice
1Pride and Prejudice
2Outline
- Your Questions?
- Structure
- Theme Marriage Love, Money, Class and
Manners/Breeding - Pride and Prejudice and Jane Austen
- Pride and Prejudice vs. Some 19th-Century Texts
- 1. Marriage Money/Class The Bride Comes to
Yellow Sky The 1,000,000 Bank Note - 2. Woman She Walks in Beauty
- 3. Art Nature? Pemberley vs. Ozymandias or
Grecian Urn - Pride and Prejudice in Todays World
3Why is Darcy's first name "Fitzwilliam"?
- "Fitzwilliam" was Darcy's mother's surname (she
was known as "Lady Anne Fitzwilliam" before her
marriage to Darcy's father, and "Lady Anne Darcy"
afterwards), and at the time it was rather common
to give a son his mother's maiden surname as his
own first name, especially if his mother's family
was in some way prominent or distinguished (or
sometimes another prominent family surname
different from his own surname). This explains
why Darcy's first name is the same as his cousin
Col. Fitzwilliam's surname. (source)
4More Questions and Comments
- Why are there names with ---
- A realist tradition (seemingly to hide the
identities of the real persons and places). - 2. How old is Darcy?
- Such I was, from eight to eight and twenty and
such I might have been but for you, my dearest,
loveliest Elizabeth! (p. 282) (see a list of
the characters and their ages here.) - 3. Re. Charlottes views of knowing one before
marrying him or her. - we only need to know the general part of the
personality since the more you realize, the more
disappointed you get.
5More Questions and Comments
- Why is Ms. Darcy not prejudiced against
Elizabeth? - Not all aristocrats are arrogant.
- Ms. Darcy is shy, but not exceedingly proud.
- Elizabeth is good-mannered and intelligent. She
makes Ms. Darcy feels less embarrassed after Ms.
Bingleys mentioning Wickham.
6Structure Pattern Contrast
Vol 1 (1) Marriage and Family -- 3 Match-Making Attempts (Mrs. Bennet-Janes, Collins, Charlottes) (2) 3 Balls
Vol 2 (1) Marriage and Individuals -- 3 Sisters Trips (climax Darcys proposal? change letter readings)
Vol III (1) Jane Elizabeths changes vs. Lydias lack of them. (2) Marriages a choice of individuals while the family factors cannot be ignored.
7Structure Pattern Contrast
- Proposals
- Collins first and 2nd proposal Darcys first
proposal and 2nd proposal - Collins response to being rejected Darcys.
- Laughter
- Elizabeths way of laughter vs. Lydias (e.g.
when being invited by Mrs. Forster Lydia
laughing and talking with more violence than
ever her letter) - Pride vs. vanity or different kinds of pride.
- Prejudice, wrong judgment, lack of judgment, lack
of moral principles. - Different kinds of letters.
8Themes Marriage Factors to Consider (1) Love
First Impressions
- Appearance sex natural attraction, not to be
trusted. - Respect and understanding of each other
- ? discussion of Charlottes case
- More . .. Family connections, money and class
background
9Marriage Factors to Consider (2) Money
- Daughters and young sons no inheritance
- ? Charlottes practical considerations.
- ? Mrs. Gardiners suggestion to Eliza.
- ? Colonel Fitzwilliam's remark on his marriage
considerations. - Wickhams fortune-hunting.
- Younger sons profession clergyman, military
officers - Women are not supposed to work limited choices
of work e.g. governess. Therefore, for survival
they mostly depend on marrying a husband or on
the (meager) inheritance their parents settle for
them.
10Marriage Factors to Consider (3) Class
- Appendix 1
- The novels focus the rural elites in a country
community with their subtle class differences - traditional gentry such as Darcy (with inherited
land) - Pseudo gentry (or lesser gentry p. 300) (e.g. Sir
Lucas and Bingley) ? Austen is more interested in
those in the lower part of this society, since
she herself is not from a rich family of
traditional gentry (her father is a clergyman).
11Marriage Factors to Consider (3) Class
- Elements of class distinction (in our novel)
furniture, number of servants, whether one has a
cook or not, a governess or not. (Appendix) - The other elements (Minma 53) descent and
connections, the length of its residence, wealth
and its source, occupation. - Those elements subject to change income,
official position and marriage (or no marriage). - ? a fixed order as a point of reference, never
fully realized (Minma 53) a society on the brink
of radical changes.
12Class Breeding/Manners
- The title of gentleman, and the respect and love
of the heroine, must be earned (302). - In other words, class distinction turns out to be
less important that having good breeding, manners
and intelligence. - E. over the Gardiners
- Before introducing them to Darcy, she was worried
over their class background (business) and
residence (London Cheapside) - After doing it, she finds "glory in every
expression, every sentence of her uncle which
marked his intelligence, his taste, or his good
manners (III 1)
13Jane Austen her novels as her children
- An intelligent woman who is not lucky in her
emotional life. (see clips 212 4242) - Both Jane and Casandra stay single all their
life (her letter to Casandra) Friday. -- At
length the day is come on which I am to flirt my
last with Tom Lefroy, and when you receive this
it will be over. My tears flow at the melancholy
idea. - Publish four novels anonymously. The editor
wanted to change the love scenes in PP. Austen
"You say the book PP is indecent. You say I am
immodest. But Sir in the depiction of love,
modesty is the fullness of truth and decency
frankness and so I must also be frank with you,
and ask that you remove my name from the title
page in all future printings 'A lady' will do
well enough." - Writing was her main interest in life and she was
able to make money with selling the six novels
however, writing novels was not considered a
proper career for women then.
14PP vs. Some 19th-Century Texts Marriage Class
- Three different kinds of marriage in Bank-Note
(US), Yellow Sky (US) and PP (UKlate 18th C). - Bank-Note the couple equally interested in
business but not materialistic social climbing
done easily. - Yellow Sky the couple, who dont really know
each other, are incompetent in the Pullman.
15PP vs. Some 19th-Century Texts Woman
- Pride and Prejudice
- But no sooner had he made it clear to himself and
his friends that she had hardly a good feature in
her face, than he began to find it was rendered
uncommonly intelligent by the beautiful
expression of her dark eyes. To this discovery
succeeded some others equally mortifying. Though
he had detected with a critical eye more than one
failure of perfect symmetry in her form, he was
forced to acknowledge her figure to be light and
pleasing and in spite of his asserting that her
manners were not those of the fashionable world,
he was caught by their easy playfulness.
16PP vs. Some 19th-Century Texts Woman
1. Praised as perfect and elevated to the
position of goddess SHE WALKS IN BEAUTY, like
the night        Of cloudless climes and
starry skies        And all that's best of
dark and bright  Meet in her aspect and her
eyes      Thus mellow'd to that tender
light      Which heaven to gaudy day denies. Â
2. Still an object of love.
17PP vs. Some 19th-Century Texts Art vs. Nature
Piano a ladys accomplishment Pemberley It was a large, handsome, stone building, standing well on rising ground, and backed by a ridge of high woody hills -- and in front, a stream of some natural importance was swelled into greater, but without any artificial appearance. Its banks were neither formal, nor falsely adorned. The portraits tell of family history.
Ozymandias wrecked by time out on a desert? futility of human ambition. Grecian Urn -- frozen pictures of ordinary people and their lives. ? Art and Ambition put in broader historical perspectives.
18PP in the Present World
- Both film versions
- (melo-)dramatize it e.g. letter-reading, proposal
scene of Wrights version. - foreground the sexual attractions of the
characters. (e.g. Darcys swimming in the BBC
version, Elizas bare shoulders in Wrights
version.)
19Bridget Joness Diary PP
- Bridgets mother // Elizabeths
- Mark Darcy Daniel Cleaver // F. Darcy
Wickham Mark Darcys house, the setting of
Pemberley house - Difference Bridget Lonely, straightforward,
- more sexually explicit in language and
behavior.
20Bridget Joness DiaryConfessions at a party
- e.g. E.g. M. Darcy I realize that when I met you
at the turkey curry buffet, I was unforgivably
rude, and wearing a reindeer jumper. I don't
think you're an idiot at all. I mean, there are
elements of the ridiculous about you. Your
mother's pretty interesting. And you really are
an appallingly bad public speaker. And, um, you
tend to let whatever's in your head come out of
your mouth without much consideration of the
consequences... But the thing is, um, what I'm
trying to say, very inarticulately, is that, um,
in fact, perhaps despite appearances, I like you,
very much. Just as you are. - Bridget You once said you liked me just as I am
and I just wanted to say likewise. I mean there
are stupid things your mum buys you, tonight's
another... classic. You're haughty, and you
always say the wrong thing in every situation and
I seriously believe that you should rethink the
length of your sideburns. But, you're a nice man
and I like you. If you wanted to pop by some time
that might be nice... more than nice.
21Whats Unchanged?
- Pride what does it mean?
- Prejudice caused by
- lack of understanding or education,
- class and cultural differences
- Human need for both money and love
22Reference
- Minma, Shinobu. Self-Deception and Superiority
Complex Derangement of Hierarchy in Jane
Austen's Emma Eighteen Century Fiction 14. 1
(Oct, 2001) 49-65.