Pride and Prejudice
When thinking of the word "satire", I assumed something difficult. That a satire novel would be difficult to comprehend or just boring to read. As you, people know from previous blog posts, I am not a reader. I read more so by force than by choice. UNLESS... If there were a book that everyone is gossiping about, I would most likely read it and join in on the gossip.
A satire novel is "the use of irony, sarcasm, ridicule, or the like, in exposing, denouncing, or deriding vice, folly, etc. 2. a literary composition, in verse or prose, in which human folly and vice are held up to scorn, derision, or ridicule", quoted from an online dictionary website. A satire novel consist of humor that intervenes with the meaning of the work as a whole but still is considered a literary merit. Humor that criticizes humanity. The satire novel I chose was Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen. You might be thinking, "Where have I heard that title from?" which is okay because there is a movie coming out called, "Pride+Prejudice+Zombies".
Pride and Prejudice is split up into 3 volumes with sub-chapters incorporated in it. The first chapter is an overview of what to expect in later chapters. There is a mother named Mrs.Bennet who is desperate to have her five unmarried daughters named Jane, Elizabeth, Mary, Kitty, and Lydia married. There is a wealthy man in their town, Charles Bingley. The girls father, Mr.Bennet made plans with Mr.Bingley and ended up having the family invited to their ball. At this ball, Jane gets familiar with Charles and ends up dancing with him. After this dance, Charles ends up becoming interested in Jane. However, events occur from the night of the ball up until the point where a man named Mr.Darcy starts becoming interested in Jane’s sister Elizabeth. Thus far, two out of the five girls have men interested in them. For a lack of a better meaning, “they have the juice.” (Only teenagers would understand that phrase) Fast forwarding to the end…
Summarizing the entire novel is boring to read so…
Jane- Potential couple with Darcy but that does not happen. She has love for Bingley, the man she was dancing with at the ball.
Elizabeth- Was proposed to by a man named Darcy but she turned him down.
Mary- Single
Lydia- Youngest sister and practically elopes with a man named Mr.Wickman.
Pride and Prejudice is a love story between two young adults who potentially let their pride and get in the way of that, hence the title. In the beginning, I thought it would be a novel about fixed marriage which is so forced. There would not be any love behind a planned marriage. Overall, I thought the novel brought up a lot of interesting themes. It's not everyday where you read a text and learn something from it. Brings me back to grade school where after every book I read I’d have to figure the moral of it. Good times.

Jane Austen uses characters to express her humor through them, making them satirical characters. The satire in this novel is the attitudes the characters possess. Some characters being Mr.Collins, Catherine, and Mr.Wickham. The author believed that marriage should not occur on forced feelings, pressures to marry from parents, or due to someone's wealth or social status and for this purpose she satirizes the society, like I mentioned before through different characters in her novel. There were characters that were judged due to their wealth in the society and because of that, women were easily attracted to them.

Jane Austen uses characters to express her humor through them, making them satirical characters. The satire in this novel is the attitudes the characters possess. Some characters being Mr.Collins, Catherine, and Mr.Wickham. The author believed that marriage should not occur on forced feelings, pressures to marry from parents, or due to someone's wealth or social status and for this purpose she satirizes the society, like I mentioned before through different characters in her novel. There were characters that were judged due to their wealth in the society and because of that, women were easily attracted to them.



I like how you present the situational irony in your own way. You first lured me to believe that Jane might marry Charles, but you ended up informing me that Jane falls in love with Bingley when you discussed Jane separately. Besides, I agreed with the author, in which I believe that marriage should not be influenced by other factors. However, I witnessed the result of an arranged marriage in my family. Luckily, my uncle and aunt are married happily after all, and arranged marriage no longer occur in my family.
ReplyDeleteI liked the organization of this a lot. It jumps from a bunch of plot summary and then BAM just kidding this is what actually happens and it's not what you expect. (I could say you're blog post was a little ironic too, it didn't go where I expected it to!) Then you discussed situational irony like Cheuk Lam said! But I've read countless novels where people are forced into marriage (I think Joy Luck Club was one of them, you should read it if you haven't already it's wicked short or you could just watch the movie, but it's pretty good either way). Marriage like you said, shouldn't be based on forced emotional connections, which is a great concept.
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