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Jane Austen (1775-1817) . Evaluation of her art. Seldom has the novel been conceived with such deliberate and successful art as in the novels of Jane Austen. Her art. 1. a classical precision of structure , (which is manipulated through incidents exactly defined) in realism .
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Evaluation of her art • Seldom has the novel been conceived with such deliberate and successful art as in the novels of Jane Austen
Her art • 1. a classical precision of structure, • (which is manipulated through incidents exactly defined) in realism. • 2. the gift of phrase • humorous, illuminating, economical, through which all is related, so that each incident can be enjoyed like that in a drama . • 3. a gift of dialogue
Her art • She deals with her characters with intensity yet with detachment, without sentimentalism. • Her knowledge of men’s behaviour was limited. • There are no extremely noble heroes and heroines, nor hateful villains; egoism is the dominant vice of human beings; no passion in her novels.
Plot of her novels • The central plot of her six novels: an eligible young man comes into a village and eventually secures the most suitable wife
Her fictional world • Her fictional world: She called her work “small square two inches of vory • country gentlemen and ladies together with snobs, bores and social “climbers”, “three or four families in a village”.
Her fictional world • She wrote about parish life with calls, walks, picnics, conversations, parties, balls, marriages .Snobbery, smugness, condescension, and lack of consideration are all held to our scorn
Pride and Prejudice (1813) • Characters: • Mrs. Bennet, Collins (the sycophantic clergyman), the imperious ‘great lady’ Catherine de Bourgh, Elizabeth, the clever, gay young woman whose prejudice is matched with the pride of Darcy, the aristocrat who conceals a goodness of heart beneath a haughty manner.
Questions concerning the excerpts • comment on • 1.the beginning sentence: “it is a truth universally acknowledged…..” • irony, humor,periodic sentence etc. • 2. Mrs Bennet’s Character;Mr Bennet’s character • 3.English society (e.g. Women’s position as reflected by the excerpts) • Style of Jane Austen