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Pride and Prejudice

Pride and Prejudice . Review Test March 5 Web March 5. Jane Austin’s Style. Figures of speech almost absent Her prose is filled with irony, satire, wit and humor Language is simple; vocabulary is learned Uses vocabulary with precision, with exactitude, with conciseness

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Pride and Prejudice

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  1. Pride and Prejudice Review Test March 5 Web March 5

  2. Jane Austin’s Style • Figures of speech almost absent • Her prose is filled with irony, satire, wit and humor • Language is simple; vocabulary is learned • Uses vocabulary with precision, with exactitude, with conciseness • Language has a musical cadence Structure is through conversations and letters.

  3. Characters • Characters revealed through conversations • Collins and Mrs. Bennet through innane, insipid remarks • Lady Catherine through her arrogant speeches and bossy ways • Darcy through his letter • Lydia’ note to her family • Jane’s letter to her sister Focus is on the portrait of middle class country life in England

  4. Attributes most admired in young ladies of this time • An ability to draw • An ability to play the piano • A certain something in their air and manner of walking • An ability to sing • An ability to be able to catch a rich husband • A large dowry • A dedication to surface manners and customs • An ability to observe all rules of decorum and propriety

  5. Attributes most admired in young men of this time • An ability to hunt and shoot • And ability to dance • An ability to game and gamble at cards • An ability to make polite conversation at social gatherings • To be of the landed gentry with much money at their disposal • An ability to set a good horse • To be lively, affable, interesting

  6. Jane Austin satirises • Greed for money • Gossipy old women • Parents who were irresponsible • Arrogant women of wealth and position • Pride of social position • Giddy young girls • Jealousy over men • Mercenary mothers/clergymen • Pomposity on men and women

  7. Questions to consider • Different types of marriages • How do Mrs. Bennet and Lady Catherine balance each other in their vulgarity • Through Collins, we learn of how girls who ran off as Lydia had done were supposed to be treated by Christian society • What role did clergymen play during his 19th century in England • List the many things you have learned concerning Jane Austen’s world

  8. Questions to consider • What causes a problem for the modern reader concerning this kind of world • Why were lawyers, bankers, and businessmen, who are highly respected today, not respected socially acceptable then • Who should be the match for Collins • What character in the novel is most filled with pride

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