Okay i know there's been a few threads on this floating around but it seems most are from a while back or have no replies - maybe because this doesn't seem like a popular topic and may come across as a bit of a feminist study
So this is just a new thread for those who want to share their ideas/what they have to contribute with everyone else.
My problem is how to make the connections - there seems to be so many ideas that connect, but i can rarely find quotes and/or techniques that link the two texts
many thanks
xx
I absolutely love the two texts:
I'll help you with one connection:
Social class system
when one reads P & P, one realises that there is a rigid social class system, represented through the character of Lady Cath.
“You will be censured, slighted and despised by everyone connected with him. Your alliance will be a disgrace; your name will never be mentioned by us”.
However Lizzy Challenges this: “In marrying your nephew I do not consider myself as quitting the sphere he is a gentleman and I am a gentleman’s daughter: so far we are equal” and provides a new found meaning of what it is to be of social equals. she believes it is based on what the person is like, manners etc...
and eventually she breaks through this rigid barrier that Austen mocks to a certain extent and allows Lizzy to marry Darcy!
however, when we read Letters to Alice, we realise that class was important and it was not so possible for Lizzy to marry Darcy. she says it was a "fantasy"
also she says: "In the genes vs. environment debate, genes won hands down, even in Jane Austen”
it is then that we begin to question, would Darcy have married Elizabeth in reality? If not, Why did Austen allow Lizzy to marry Darcy in her novel? Why did she write a fantasy?
then you could apply Weldon's better Novels theory (letter 2 , end) that Austen attempted to change the society of her time and provided a new meaning of what it is to be of social equals, which was radical for that time.
so that is a connection. Weldon allows us to better appreciate P &P by providing contextual information of her time and through the representation of Austen as a better builder in the city of invention
Hope that helped