Gender Roles
Austen in her book Sense and Sensibility aggressively and successfully attempts to reconstruct fiction in patriarchal gender conceptions. The dissonance of a masculinized Dashwood and feminized Edward Ferrars amounts to a high degree of reconstruction of gender stereotypes. Traditional writers have urged women to come out strongly and condemn their discrimination by any means be it at family or community level. Moreover, Austen's female gender plays a subordinate role in the family.
Jane Austen is neither completely conservative in her fiction's themes, nor is she promoting a radical form of feminism she insists that something must usually hold a woman back, it may be economics, family background, or her own individuality and in any circumstances a compromise must be made between the individual and society.
At some point Austen seems to support the conventional values of a woman for example finding pleasure in their marriages although at some points she identifies loopholes in the way the society encourages certain modes of behavior
Austen appears to force people to look at their world in a unique way, in other words she does not present herself in a fully conservative way in this way, and Austen's heroines achieve an independence that can operate within convention. In most of her novels, women who are already married seem to have the most control. An example in her book Sense and Sensibility is where Fanny Dashwood is shown at the very beginning of the story to be manipulative over her husband. A look at the following excerpts from the book gives us more lightly on...
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