Friday, July 19, 2019
Subversion of Class and Gender Roles in Jane Austens Persuasion Essay
Subversion of Class and Gender Roles in Jane Austen's Persuasion     Ã     Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   In Jane  Austen's Persuasion, Mrs. Croft makes but few appearances and delivers little  dialogue.Ã   Nevertheless, Austen gives her significant narrative and  thematic importance.Ã   Mrs. Croft provides a foil for several of the  Elliots, while developing a commonality with the frequently ostracized  Anne.Ã   This bond between Mrs. Croft and Austen's heroine valorizes Mrs.  Croft's radical views concerning feminism and marriage.Ã   Beyond signifying  a paradigm shift in such social morals, though, the roles of Admiral and Mrs.  Croft allow Austen to subvert the dominant upper class culture.Ã   By  exhibiting superior but genuine manners, by demonstrating the complacency of the  dominant culture, and by exerting their own counterculture, Admiral and Mrs.  Croft expose both the foolishness and the artifice of their upper class  acquaintances.     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Austen clearly contrasts Mrs. Croft with Sir  Walter, Elizabeth and Mary, and therein reveals the selfish and impractical  nature of luxury, saying, "none of us expect to be in smooth water all our days"  (50).Ã   She admits to the confinement of a frigate, but notes that "any  reasonable woman may be perfectly happy in one" (50, italics mine).Ã    Meanwhile, Sir Walter cannot imagine life without "[journeys], London, servants,  horses . . ." (10), and, for Elizabeth, "the sacrifice of one pair of horses  would be hardly less painful than of both" (10).Ã   Mrs. Croft thus  highlights the Elliots' frivolousness.Ã   The Crofts also illustrate Sir  Walter's vanity, by moving his several looking glasses into storage, since  Admiral Croft requires only one.Ã   Similarly, Mrs. Croft exposes Mary's self  pity, allowing us to co...              ...ne Elliot as worthy not only of the  noble relations of their family, but also of the superior culture of the  Crofts.     Ã       Works Cited and Consulted     Austen, Jane.Ã   Persuasion.Ã   1993.Ã   Ware, Herts:Ã    Wordsworth, 1996.     Craik, W. A. Jane Austen in her Time. London: Nelson, 1969.     DaDundo, Laura. "Jane Austen" Concise Dictionary of British Literary  Biography. Vol. III. Detroit: Gale Research Inc., 1992.     Harmon, William, and C. Hugh Holman. Handbook to Literature. Upper Saddle  River, N.J.: Prentice Hall, 1986.     Magill, Frank N., ed. English Novel: Richardson to Hardy. Pasadena: Salem  Softbacks, 1980.     Southam, Brian. "Jane Austen." British Writers. Vol. IV. Ed. Ian  Scott-Kilvert. New York: Scribners, 1981.     Tanner, Tony. "In Between: Persuasion." Persuasion. By Jane Austen. Ed.  Patricia Meyers Spacks. New York: Norton and Co., 1995.     Ã                        
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