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Author’s Ideology as Reflected in Alice Walker’s “The Color Purple” and Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice”
(5 Pages, 59.75 $ (USD) )
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This is a 5 page paper discussing how the ideologies of Alice Walker and Jane Austen are represented in their novels. Women novelists Alice Walker and Jane Austen provide different examples of how they have managed to represent their own ideologies within their novels. Alice Walker wrote “The Color Purple” in 1982 and conveyed her ideologies of equal and civil rights through the first person narration of the central character of Celie who is a poor, black woman living under the oppression of society and the men in her life. Her character slowly develops a sense of independence that Walker wishes upon her black female readers. In the 19th century, Jane Austen’s novel “Pride and Prejudice” also included Austen’s feminist ideologies in regards to many of the unreasonable and unequal aspects in society in the treatment of women. Because Austen was writing at a time when women were expected to only write sentimental novels however, Austen reveals her ideologies through the minor characters in the book, such as Mrs. Bennet, who through a satirical twist find society’s conventions unreasonable while her central characters are considered conventional and therefore accepted. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
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| 2. |
Jane Austen’s “Mansfield Park” - British Values and Morals and Stately Old Homes
(12 Pages, 143.4 $ (USD) )
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This 12 page report discusses Jane Austen’s novel “Mansfield Park” (1814). Jane Austen presents her late 18th and early 19th century world to readers of the 21st century with such clarity and distinction that it becomes impossible to not apply the universal truths of her time to the contemporary age. In “Mansfield Park” she presents the reader with a vision of stateliness, propriety, and the confines of good taste. “Mansfield Park” should also be thought of as Jane Austen’s venture into a darker, more somber story then she typically tells. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
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| 3. |
Comparing Jane Austen’s “Persuasion” with the 1995 Movie
(5 Pages, 59.75 $ (USD) )
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This 5 page report discusses Jane Austen’s last novel “Persuasion” and the 1995 movie adaptation of the book. The characters of “Persuasion” (or any other Jane Austen novel) are almost always constantly talking. They chatter, they gossip, and speculate on every aspect of the world around them. It is in this fact that the “Persuasion” is the most radically different. Anne is not a talker and neither is the object of her affection, Captain Wentworth. Perhaps because of the multi-media experience of film, this is conveyed with far greater emphasis in the 1995 movie of “Persuasion” directed by Roger Mitchell. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
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| 4. |
Feminist Scholarship and the View of Women in Jane Austen's Society
(5 Pages, 59.75 $ (USD) )
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This 5 page paper considers the limited roles of men and women in Jane Austen's society and assesses the social conventions, enforced by gossip, that keep women in line. This paper specifically explores the characterization of Elizabeth Bennett in Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice and argues that she is a representation of a modern woman in a nineteenth century world.
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| 5. |
Comparative Analysis of Jane Austen’s “Emma” and Charlotte Bronte’s “Jane Eyre”
(5 Pages, 59.75 $ (USD) )
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A 5 page paper which examines the similarities of these novels, such as how they are representative of their time periods, how they feature women who were clearly before their time, and how rigid socioeconomic class conventions dictated gender roles and marital compatibility. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
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| 6. |
Relationships in Pride and Prejudice
(3 Pages, 35.85 $ (USD) )
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A 3 page paper which examines the relationships between Jane and Charles, and Elizabeth and Darcy in Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice.” Bibliography lists 2 sources.
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| 7. |
The Social and Domestic Visions of Bronte and Austen
(7 Pages, 83.65 $ (USD) )
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This 7 page paper considers the estates of Pemberley, from Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice, and Ferndean Manor, from Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre, and assesses the way these two estates embody social and domestic vision. In correlation, this paper also assesses the impacts of these estates in shaping the novels as a whole. No additional sources cited.
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| 8. |
'Jane Eyre' And 'Pride and Prejudice': Differing Perspectives On Love
(6 Pages, 71.7 $ (USD) )
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6 pages in length. The perspectives on love as represented in Charlotte Bronte's 'Jane Eyre' and Jane Austen's 'Pride and Prejudice' are grand and far-reaching. The writer discusses that to compare and contrast the way in which these two stories address the issues of love is to demonstrate the contrarieties between a spontaneous, smoldering romance and one that is born initially out of yearning and frustration. No additional sources cited.
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Paper Keywords -charbro
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Submit your Term Paper and get paid for every sale made
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You are in search result page of the pharse "Jane Austen".
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