Pride and Prejudice (Annotated)
Critical Edition with Literary Analysis & Author Biography | Jane Austen | Erato Press
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Jane Austen
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
The first sentence is a joke. Everything that follows is serious.
"It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife." Jane Austen wrote that in 1813 and it has never stopped being funny — or stopped being true in the specific way that cuts. The sentence is ironic. The society it describes was not.
Pride and Prejudice is a novel about intelligence operating inside a system designed to prevent its exercise. Elizabeth Bennet is the most perceptive person in every room she enters — and the room, being England in 1813, has arranged things so that her only legitimate use of that perception is in the choice of a husband. She makes the choice badly, then correctly, and the novel is the distance between those two moments.
Elizabeth Bennet — She sees clearly, judges quickly, and is wrong about the things that matter most — not because she is foolish, but because she is proud of being right. The novel is her education, which she undergoes with more grace than most.
Mr. Darcy — He is insufferable for exactly the reasons Elizabeth identifies and insufferable for reasons she misses entirely. He is also, in the end, the only person in the novel who changes completely — and does so without being asked.
Mrs. Bennet, Mr. Collins, Lady Catherine de Bourgh — Austen understood that comedy requires victims, and she made hers with the precision of someone who had spent years in rooms with people exactly like this.
✦ Complete and unabridged — all three volumes of the original 1813 text.
This edition also contains:
✦ Afterword — an original critical essay on Pride and Prejudice as a moral and aesthetic achievement: what Austen understood about consciousness, irony, and the novel form that her contemporaries missed ✦ The World of Jane Austen: England in the Age of Revolution — historical context covering the English class system, women's lives under Regency law, the country house economy, and the world that made Elizabeth Bennet's choices both constrained and consequential ✦ Jane Austen: A Life in Letters and Silence — a full critical biography of Austen: the quiet life in Hampshire, the novels written in secret, the early death, and the myth that replaced the woman
For readers who enjoy:
✦ Women's literary fiction with genuine moral and psychological intelligence ✦ Historical romance and Regency fiction (Georgette Heyer, Joanna Trollope, Curtis Sittenfeld) ✦ Classic British novels in carefully edited critical editions ✦ Fiction that is funnier and darker than it first appears
She gave Elizabeth every advantage of mind and none of the advantages that mind requires to act. That was not a flaw in the novel. That was the novel.