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    Pride and prejudice Based on the novel by Jane Austin Directed by Joe Wright [pic] How do you take a classic of Jane Austen and adapt it to the big screen- without missing the subtle details and innuendoes found in her novels? The movie “Pride and Prejudice” is not to be used as a substitute for her novels; rather it is a visually stimulating insight into the life of one of the world’s greatest romance heroines- enhanced by the extraordinary settings‚ vibrancy of costume‚ expressiveness

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    "It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife." The second half of this opening sentence of the novel reveals that the "universal truth" is nothing more than a social truth. When claiming that a single man "must be in want of a wife"‚ Jane Austen reveals that the reverse in also true; a single woman is in‚ perhaps desperate‚ want of a husband. In nineteenth century Britain‚ what people did and their behaviour was very much governed

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    The Lost Guardian Chapter One - Epidemic “Aghhh‚” Zander spat out‚ utterly exhausted‚ as he wearily hurtled himself down on the torn apart sofa. Sheer tiredness now suddenly a heavy burden like how the titan Atlas bears the weight of the world‚ he fainted‚ entirely oblivious to the ear-damaging horns and the chaotic mayhem just across the rubbish strewn street. With uneven breaths‚ he painfully awoke 3 hours later‚ only to hear a drunk bloke shriek‚ at the top of his lungs‚ “Screw the Black-Rule

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    Cooperation: co·op·er·a·tion. n. the process of working together until the end (“Cooperation” def. 1). However‚ cooperation is not the only thing that a marriage should depend on. In the novel‚ Pride and Prejudice‚ Jane Austen conveys traits significant to a successful marriage. She presents a happily-ever-after type of relationship‚ making the reader fall in hopes of having a successful partnership; then compares it to a selfish‚ greedy‚ compassionless‚ civilized union. Mr. Gardiner and Mrs. Gardiner

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    Pride and Prejudice is nowadays regarded as Jane Austen’s most enduringly popular novel. It was first published in 1813 and is a rewritten version of her earlier work First Impressions which had been refused for publication in 1797.1 Jane Austen worked on this novel during her most productive time‚ the first two decades of the nineteenth century. The setting of ‘Pride and Prejudice’ falls also to the time she lived and therefore delivers a detailed depiction of the existing society. The novel

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    class not only dominates the material sources of society‚ but also controls the intellectual modes of production. The ruling class circulates its ideas as the only rational‚ ideal‚ universal ideas‚ to maintain their hegemony. Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice was written much earlier‚ however even then class expectations restricted the English society. The novel is a critique of society through social satire by the means of social caricatures embodied in Mr. Collins and Lady Catherine de Burgh. The

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    Rebekah Johnson Mrs. Tencza Late European History 21 November 2012 Do’s and Don’ts of Pride and Prejudice In 19th century England‚ manners played a big role. In her book Pride and Prejudice‚ Jane Austen portrays many different aspects of English social manners in the 1800s‚ and these facets of English etiquette‚ including traveling etiquette‚ social propriety‚ and dancing‚ greatly affect the plot of the book. One aspect of English social etiquette was the set of strict rules for how one was to act

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    The gender roles set in Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen are those of women potentials being watered down to simple‚ meaningless things for only marriage. Women suffered in many ways from the restrictions of advancements in life allowed for them. The only option of achieving something in life was to either marry rich or be dependent. The choices of education are obsolete and so they were only allowed to reach so far of a certain level and higher learning were only allowed for men. Deviations from

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    adaptations to Austen have decided to downplay these themes‚ however‚ in exchange for playing up the romance. These films reveal the 20th century emphasis on romance at the cost of excluding the already established importance of self-knowledge. Pride and Prejudice‚ Austen ’s first written but later published novel‚ is a commentary on the importance in society of inheritance and achievement. Austen obviously valued one ’s achieved virtues over inherited status‚ a revolutionary notion for a female of the

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    In Pride and Prejudice‚ Jane Austen opens the novel with the line‚ “It is a truth universally acknowledged‚ that a single man in possession of a good fortune‚ must be in want of a wife” (Austen 3). In this line‚ Austen is mocking what was considered to be a societal norm in the nineteenth century: the trophy wife. In this particular line‚ the voice that makes this proclamation is feminine. Furthermore‚ the voice is not only feminine but it also seems to be annoyed by this particular societal norm

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