pride and prejudice background information. literary & narrative techniques

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Pride and Prejudice Background Information

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Page 1: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Pride and PrejudiceBackground Information

Page 2: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Page 3: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Satire• Ideas, customs,

behaviors, or institutions are ridiculed in order to criticize human folly and to improve society• Listen closely to

Elizabeth!

Page 4: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Irony• DRAMATIC = the

audience is aware of something the audience/readers are not

• VERBAL = a speaker says one thing but means another (sarcasm)

• SITUATIONAL = a difference between what is expected to happen and what actually does happen

Page 5: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Free Indirect Discourse• The practice of embedding a

character’s speech or thoughts into an otherwise third-person narrative.

• The narrative moves back and forth between the narrator telling us what the character is thinking and showing us the character’s conscious thoughts, without denoting which thought belongs to whom. • a character's thoughts or spoken words

are reported without quotation marks (or some other kind of indication, like the phrase "she thought" or "he said").

• The result is a story that reads almost like it shares two “brains”: one belonging to the narrator, the other belonging to the character.

Elizabeth

Page 6: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

LITERARY GENRE

Page 7: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Comedy of Manners• Uses elements of satire to ridicule or expose the behaviors,

manners, flaws, and morals of the middle or upper classes• Love affairs, witty & comical exchanges, humorous revelation

of societal scandals

Page 8: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Comedy of Manners Examples• The characters’

searches for love & financial stability• Social scandals of the

Meryton community• Witty banter

between Elizabeth and Mr. Darcy or Mr. and Mrs. Bennet

Page 9: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

THEMES

Page 10: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Social Class & Lack of Mobility• By the 19th century, 3

distinct groups made up the social class system: working, middle & upper classes• Mr. Darcy = hereditary

aristocracy• Mr. Bingley = landed

gentry• The Bennets = middle

class

Page 11: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Marriage and Family• Acknowledges that

marriage was a necessity for women in the 18th and 19th centuries

• Also expresses Austen’s disillusionment with the fact that women were often forced into marriage out of financial necessity

• Through Elizabeth, Austen advocates for marriage based on mutual respect and love

Page 12: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Pride and Prejudice• Originally planned to

title the novel First Impressions• First impressions and

premature preconceptions complicate the relationships between the characters • Pride and prejudice

influence these perceptions

Page 13: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

THE CHARACTERS

Page 14: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Mr. Bennet• Patriarch of the family• Belongs to the minor

gentry; gets a small income from the land attached to his estate (Longbourn)• Very fond of Elizabeth• No sons, so estate will

pass to Mr. Collins

Page 15: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Mrs. Bennet• Married to Mr.

Bennet for 23 years• Her main goal in life

is to find husbands for her daughters• Fond of Lydia; not as

fond of Elizabeth

Page 16: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Jane Bennet• Eldest daughter• Close to Elizabeth• Befriended by the

Bingley sisters• Known for her beauty

and good nature

Page 17: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Elizabeth Bennet• Second eldest

daughter• 20 years old• Bright and

independent• Tends to speak her

mind

Page 18: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Mary Bennet• Third daughter• The intellectual of

the family• Busies herself with

reading and music

Page 19: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Catherine (Kitty) Bennet• Fourth daughter• 18 years old• Close to Lydia

Page 20: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Lydia Bennet• Youngest daughter• 15 years old• Mrs. Bennet’s

favorite • Very prone to flirting,

especially with the officers in Meryton

Page 21: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

• Owner of a country estate called Pemberley• Income of 10,000

pounds per year • Reputation as a

proud and ill-mannered man• Close friend of

Charles Bingley

Fitzwilliam Darcy

Page 22: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Charles Bingley• Inherits the fortune

his father built through manufacturing and trade• Leases Netherfield

Park• Falls in love with Jane

Bennet

Page 23: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Caroline Bingley & Louisa Hurst• Charles Bingley’s sisters• Each command a

fortune of 20,000 pounds• Join Bingley in

Netherfield, but live in London• Louisa is married to Mr.

Hurst; Caroline wants to marry Mr. Darcy

Page 24: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Charlotte Lucas• Eldest child of Sir

William and Lady Lucas• Elizabeth’s closest

friend

Page 25: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Mr. Collins• Mr. Bennet’s cousin• The Bennet’s closest

male relative• According to the laws

of entail, he stands to inherit Longbourn

Page 26: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Mr. Wickham• Member of militia

regimen posted to Meryton• Son of the late Mr.

Darcy’s steward• Known Fitzwilliam

Darcy since childhood

Page 27: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Lady Catherine de Bourgh• Wealthy widow of

high social standing• Lives with her

daughter Anne at Rosings Park• Sister of Darcy’s late

mother and intends for him to marry Anne

Page 28: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Mr. and Mrs. Gardiner• Mr. Gardiner is Mrs.

Bennet’s brother; he is a businessman in trade in London• Mrs. Gardiner is close

to Jane and Elizabeth

Page 29: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Colonel Fitzwilliam• Darcy’s cousin• Develops a friendship

with Elizabeth

Page 30: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Georgiana Darcy• 16 years old• Darcy’s sister• Rumored that she is

intended to marry Charles Bingley• Was previously

involved with Wickham

Page 31: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

COMMON QUESTIONS

Page 32: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

Cousins Marrying??• Yes, Mr. Collins and the Bennet girls are cousins (distant).• Remember, the priority during that time period was keeping

property within the family – that was much more important than love

Page 33: Pride and Prejudice Background Information. LITERARY & NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES

What do the “---”s mean?• Austen used "-----" a lot in her writing. Example "------ shire" or

"lord/lady -----". • She did this to avoid insulting or annoying the aristocracy. She

sometimes used real people/events and didn't want any confusion in her books. • If she used a real shire like Oxfordshire (real place) then someone

could argue her book could never have taken place there be of x y or z. So she just omitted real names of people and places to keep her writing credible.