Sense and sensibility in Feminist Approach
- Introduction
Jane Austen’s novels from 1995 to 2005 interplay the
feminist issues that become the mainstream issues highlight. Jane has to very
popular and she is innovative one in all her novel to real and feminist issues
portray. In her novel, 1995 to 2005 all novel in female has only in straggle to
male dominated society. Jane Austen’s
novel in that they revealed only the most "distant recognition'' of the
"feelings' and no awareness of the "passions'. And it may that What
throbs fast and full, though hidden, what the blood rushes through, what is the
unseen seat of life and the sentient target of death—this Miss Austen
ignores." It remained for Jane
Austen's nephew to provide biographical support for the view by recording,
"Of events her life was singularly barren”. In her work to Jane says that
to female has to marginalization in society
and we see that to his five best novel to woman has situation bad and
face to every time in give money, sacrifices, love and man neglected to woman.
Jane Austen best five novels are like that.
- Sense and Sensibility
- Persuasion
- Emma
- Mansfield Park
- Pride and Prejudice
In this five novels in Austen
has to women are face to problem in society and there are very helpless to men.
But in her “sense and sensibility” (1818) in three Sister Elinor, Marianne and
Margret life and also they are mature but as female face social problem in this
novel. Jane had woman spectator expands not only as feminist, female and
feminine, she portrayed to woman in society. Austen’s novels are translated
into ideologies that reflect the social context of the productions. So now Jane
has feminist author and she wrote to woman identities in this novel ‘sense and
sensibility’. And she applies to feminist approach in the novel.
- Feminist approach
Feminism
a recognized movement in the 18th century and 19th century. We know that to
female are marginalized in society and many readers are writing to woman and
most of female novelist and it may be that to fictional reconstruction of
patriarchal gender conceptions and also woman as gender different and we can
see that to stereotype behaviors in society and men. When Jane Austen was
writing her novels, England faced the early feminist consciousness,
abolitionism, and war with France and its post –revolution tension, along with
the strained relationship with the newly independent America. Austen turned her
back on the social and political context other time, and that she was an
anti-Jacobin and reactionary feminist who rejects the feminism of
Wollstonecraft The reading of Jane Austen, however, shows diverging opinions on
her involvement with those issues in this novel woman are helpless and we know
that to truth but men reject to woman. Here Elinor and Marianne are character
also feeling to man as Robert, Willoughby, and Edward etc. So in this novel Jane Austen has to woman in
my interpreted into ‘sense and sensibility’ this following are like that:
female character, man use to women in sexual, Jane Austen style, feminist
adaption and my argument. And novel in see that men and women characters…
- Feminist approach in sense and sensibility In this novel female characters are three Dashwood Elinor, Marianne and Margret and also Mrs. Dashwood. Jane Austen has woman more than space to man and developing to all woman character. Jane Austen Hs to three sister are different and most that to Elinor different nature and she is mature to two other sister and she is very common understand may be to not emotion. She has to undergo characters evolutions. Elinor experience three emotions breakdowns when Edward and Lucy engagement is revealed and known to Marianne, when Marianne is in sickbed and it may be that to Edward explains Lucy’s married to his brother. Jane say that to Elinor has to be woman not express to feeling to man. Here Jane has to feminist and maybe she is emotions and social political one into only money and Lucy has woman, it may be only to rich man married and not poor, or not love and emotion selected. So Jane has to Elinor as a balanced character and human being who is not only rationally but also capable. And in this novel sensibility as Marianne has emotion and youngest to dashwood sister only one but she failed in love to Mr. Willoughby and he reject to her. So that in here Jane has to feeling and hopeless of men woman behaves and it may be that to love, money, sexual and political-social to her. In last Margret is mere complement in novel and she is younger two other sister, an outspoken boyish character though whom the protests against patriarchal arrangements of society are expressed. She is shown climbing a tree house both in norland and Barton, she uses telescope and may be to Jane style to woman are free in society and also that to child girl is free one.
So that in Jane Austen point of views
and she real issues portray to all woman character. And also reflect to Jane in
late 20th century and early 21st century into woman post feminist issues in
society. We can see that to all
interplays it with different issues” slavery, money, property, religious male
dominated society and woman are margined of male society. So that in one to
feminist in sense and sensibility novel in Jane Austen feminist ideas but now
other detail to Jane’s style, feminist adaption and sexual use to woman in this
novel ‘sense and sensibility’.
- Jane Austen’s style as woman
As
we know that to her distinction is crucial in that it hints at the basic
fallacy of the limitationists, their confusion of a novel's tone with its
issues. For Jane has suspect we have been hoaxed by the well-bred air of Jane
Austen's characters as woman in male dominated society there by the eminently
social tone of their conversations, by the very stability of their moral universe.
Any writer's style evidently is determined in some measure by the culture from
which many critics argues that derives woman writer by the kinds of words and
linguistic structures that the culture makes especially available to him\her.
And no one would question that Jane Austen, although her novels were published
in the early 19th century. And Jane has her major affinities with the culture
of the 18th century and with the stylistic modes that it fostered. And indeed
many traits that I shall be finding in Jane Austen's style such as her
dependence on conceptual terms her style’s of writing and that ways with a
particularized diction in 18th century. In this novel to be Jane Austen’s style
has to only woman as main and it may be that to indeed in Jane Austen's style
such concepts are the real actors. She often handles these groups of nouns as
if they need only step on the stage in order to convince the audience. But we
must never doubt their power on that account. For conceptual terms of this sort
gain a kind of life of their own in that they seem to universalize whatever
aspects of experience they name, treating them less as parts of a single
configuration the way the individual would encounter them in reality and
positive attitudes of woman identities in this two characters and all novel of
Jane Austen’s style in her writing.
- Feminist adaption
In the novel ‘sense and sensibility’ in feminist
approach in such example of Jane Austen as feminist critic and we see that to
this novel in female, feminine and feminist to all in women as main so that in
here explain to Ang lee has translation and adaption to feminist in sense and
sensibility. In novel sense and sensibility, Feminist adaption is not only to
subvert cultures of patriarchal hegemony of translation, but also to manifest
womanish language characteristics. In discussion of relationships between
translation and ideology, and also know that to
more than an issue of assailing linguistic dominance from patriarchy,
and this issue has contributed to the establishment of women’s subjectivity. The
feminist adaptations are: translating women’s body, recovering women’s lost
works, asserting the translator’s identity revising the rhetoric of
translation, reading and rewriting existing translations. In Ang lee said that
to thus first theorize how feminist adaptations studies can be appropriated by
film adaptation, and then compare the novel of Sense and Sensibility to its
film adaptations. Feminist translation presents another perspective on women’s
issues – it is trying to discontinue intentional or unintentional distortion of
women in translation. An example to Elaine showalter in her gynocritics like
that.
E.g.
1. Elaine Showalter provides a blueprint for western feminist criticism: “English feminist criticism, Marxist, stresses oppression; French feminist criticism, psychoanalytic, stresses repression; American feminist criticism, textual and stresses expression. All however have become gynocentric”. Feminist translation began as a purely theoretical offshoot of western literary feminism; it was undeniably influenced by British, American, and French feminisms. Whose emphasis is rewriting literary history and reinventing women’s language to establish its creature feminine, that “the inscription of the female body and female difference in language and text”. Showalter’s gynocritics is actually a guiding light for feminist translation that is specifically characteristic of women’s translation. “Gynocritics” as the second phase of “feminist criticism,” coined and advocated by Showalter in “Toward a Feminist Poetics,”
2. Simone de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex, “One is not born, but rather becomes, a woman” claims that gender and body are acculturated: “No biological, psychological or economic fate determines the figure that the human female presents in society that it is civilization as a whole that produces this creature, intermediate between male and eunuch which is described as feminine”. Simone de Beauvoir’s thought that woman as second sex is a cultural signification, not biological. And also to be female at society in women’s freedom is contingent on their linguistic liberation.
In novel sense and
sensibility to that explain female
characters and also to be feminine to novel it may be that Ang lee’s Sense and
Sensibility, as Fanny Dashwood moves to Norland, she derides Mrs. Dashwood and
her daughters, but in the novel, she behaves politely. And also she has to film
characters to this novel in protrude to woman and men and it may be that to her
perspective to all direction to film. The strategy of prefacing and footnoting
is adopted in the episode of John Willoughby’s going to the rescue of Marianne,
who suffers a serious ankle injury and is treated differently by the three
versions. In the novel Willoughby goes hunting with his rifle and black hound
when he comes to her rescue; Ang Lee arranges for his Willoughby to appear as a
Prince Charming riding a white horse to rescue Marianne; however, John
Alexander does not particularly put any emphasis upon the rescue scene. Jane
Austen insinuates that Marianne falls prey to the hunter Willoughby (with a gun
and two hounds) at their first encounter, but Alexander’s Willoughby loves
another girl feverishly in the opening scene. Towards the end of the TV, media
and film also feminist adaptation from a male-oriented point of view,
Willoughby not only sends a letter to Marianne but also visits her in person,
revealing his uneasiness in front of Elinor. Today’s audience will be inclined
to sympathize with his desertion of Marianne. In the original text Marianne is
sleeping during his visit; however, in the two movies, she moves to listen to
Willoughby’s conversation with Elinor and later marries Brandon to show an
unflinching determination to sever her relationship with Willoughby. The
reconstruction of the character of Margaret is typically a hijacking strategy
of feminist adaptation. Margaret is a silent character of little importance in
the novel. In this novel to she is endowed with significant strength, keeping a
balance between rationality and sensibility, reminding the adult to return to
childlike naiveté and to return to nature as symbolized in her tree house.
Apparently John Alexander appropriates Emma Thompson’s adaptation to grasp the
girlish spirits in Margaret. So that in all critic and also example to two
feminist critics and her point of view and it may be that to film in Ang lee’s
adaptations to novel sense and sensibility by Jane Austen. And also feminine to
marginalization to women in society and
her legitimate to than language and also to emerging of female characters in
novel and here Dashwood’s sisters are also symbolic and tragedy to her own self
but the end of novel three are win in society, and it may to Jane Austen as
woman writer in her identities.
- My point of view in this novel
In this novel ‘sense and sensibility’ in point of view
that to Jane has woman writer and it may be that to woman personality and her
desires to this three sister Margret, mariner and Elinor. Jane has woman writer
did not have many rights. She was a legal infant and her conduct was determined
by many rules. She could not enter the professions or study at the university,
and society had sketched out the outlines of a perfect woman pretty clearly. To
leave political, legal and military affairs – the “masculine sphere” and you
can see that to feminine voice in novel. And it may be that woman has to
struggle a lot and know that female has face to problem and we know that to men
as every time not respect and it torched female, reject her love, property,
religious and here we see that to woman not writing in Victorian age. But we
have to house work and it may be that woman not her own property, house, and
money and not choose to her life partner. So that in novel here we see that
feminine voice to Jane Austin and she wrote to woman situation and her position
of society and also her desire to watch this novel so that all about my
perspective in novel and also she feminine voice to his three sisters in you
can see that.
- · Conclusion
So that in this novel we can see that to woman are
challenges to men and also men reject to her love and it may be that to Jane
Austen ideas to sense means common sense, knowledge, smartness and sensibility
means emotion, desire and care of family. My argument on the identification
of woman spectatorship of her characters influenced by my own
identification as a woman who can early define herself as female and feminist though not always
feminine. So that here we can see that
Jane Austen does not create a woman’s world – she presents the real world, in
which the limits on the conversation are those of the knowledge and interests
of the speakers, and she allows us to perceive it through the consciousness of
her heroines. Her men, for example are not creations of female fantasy, where
the writer was afraid to know or at least to display knowledge of real
masculinity and they are real men, perceived by women.
Hi, Deepika ,really you did good work in this assignment using feminist approach in the novel. it is also good that for the explanation you did the comparison two characters, also.good
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