Love And Marriage

Related Essays

  • Pride And Prejudice And Modern Film Love in Relationships vs. Love for Oneself In a day where loving yourself first is not only accepted but often expected, it is a stretch for the 20th (or 21st...
  • "Pride And Prejudice" By Jane Austen The whole answer is to be written as a cohesive piece of text, but please use paragraphs to create natural pauses in your answer.) As an introduction, write no...
  • The Evolving Ideas Of Marriage In Pride And Prejudice The Evolving ideas of Marriage in Pride and Prejudice In Jane Austen's, Pride and Prejudice, the theme of marriage and the evolving role it plays in the lives of...
  • Feminism Feminism is an important theme that many writers drew their novels around. In the other hand, many critics approached this theme as well and tried to judge these...
  • Class And The Individual In Society Class and the Individual in Society Although we take it mostly for granted, today we enjoy relatively free lives. Whilst there are still some restraining forces...

Love And Marriage

Love and marriage in "Pride and Prejudice”

      The Romanticism Movement in English literature is the Era of outstanding writers and their wonderful masterpieces. Among them there is one who deserves special attention, the one who contributed to development of the Romantic novel - Jane Austen. The writer is considered to be one of the greatest novelists whose "undoubted merit is her influence on later birth of the novel of manners, as she develops the Augustan patterns of novels of sensibility equipping the genre with more contemporary concerns”[1].
      The best example of novel by Jane Austen in which she explores the contrast in the large context of behavior closely associated with the social and economic framework is Pride and Prejudice. Besides many themes that are described in the book like: family and upbringing, education, snobbery of so-called nobles etc. love and marriage is especially worth mentioning.
      The importance of marriage in the lives of main characters: Elizabeth Bennet and her sisters may be difficult for modern readers to understand. Young women today have a variety of options open to them regarding their future-they can marry, of course, but they can also go to college, follow any career path that may interest them, and live on their own, independent of relatives or chaperones. Young women of Austen's day did not have these advantages. In general the book perfectly portraits the struggles of finding the inevitable husband and of a society that believes in male superiority. Love and marriage in Romantic Time, when matrimony to a gentleman of wealth was the goal of most women lives, ladies' point of view changed very rapidly; it jumps from admiration to love and from love to matrimony.
      Thus, in 19th century in England people had a tendency to marry because of financial benefits. A person sought a partner based on the dowry receivable and their allowance. This process functioned in both ways: beautiful lady was able to seduce...

View Full Essay

  • Submitted by: paula864
  • Date Submitted: 12/31/2008 12:36 PM
  • Category: English
  • Words: 1149
  • Pages: 5
  • Views: 187
  • Popularity Rank: 12372

View Full Essay

Want More?

Thousands of students trust PeerPapers.com for help with their writing. Shouldn't you?

Join Now