简奥斯丁的女性主义在《傲慢与偏见》与《艾玛》中的体现毕业论文.doc
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1、【标题】简?奥斯丁的女性主义在傲慢与偏见与艾玛中的体现【作者】杨 雪 【关键词】简?奥斯丁;伊丽莎白;艾玛;女性主义 【指导老师】张亚军 向 俊 【专业】英语 【正文】I. Personal Data of Jane AustenA. Her Life ExperienceJane Austen was born on December 16th, 1775. at her fathers rectory at Steventon in Hampshire in Southern England. She died of a then incurable disease on July 18t
2、h, 1817, in Winchester. Jane Austen has not married in her life. She lived with her parents until the death of her father in 1805, and then with her mother until the year when she herself died.Both Jane Austens father and mother are well educated and intelligent. This is the reason that even though
3、she dont recieve much education at school, she is also well educated.It is proved that her education from her parents at home is quite successful. Jane Austen reads lots of the English classics, such as Shakespeare, Milton, Johnson, and Cowper, as well as some contemporary poets and prose writers. B
4、esides her broad knowledge of literature, she also knows languages from different countries. And all these are undoubtfully proved that she is well prepared to be a writer.And also Jane Austen changes gradually from a high-spirited and occasionally satirical young girl to a sensible and compassionat
5、e mature woman in her life.When Jane Austen lived in her fathers rectory in Steventon, due to the assurance of her familys position, Jane was an ebullient young woman with youthful cleverness. As shown in her letters, she was a lively and energetic young lady of spirit, who was good at observing fri
6、ends and neighbors caustically. But after the death of his father, Jane Austen went to live in Southampton with her mother and Cassandra. During this period they were subject to anxieties and financial rearrangements. In this place, as her family was relatively unknown in the area, Jane Austen turne
7、d from an outspoken commentator to a cautious observer. In 1809 they settled in Chawton, Hampshire, where Jane Austen lived until her death. There they settled down at last and lived happily, largely without financial anxieties. By this time Jane Austen had developed into a relatively assured and ma
8、ture woman. She finally erached a stage in which her sophistication and childlike gaiety of spirit were mixed together.B. Her Social BackgroundJane Austen lives mostly in the countryside of England at the turn of the 18th and 19th century. The great events of the time include the Industrial Revoluti
9、on and the French Revolution. Under the impetus of the Industrial Revolution, great social changes have taken place in England. As to the change in social classes, the old aristocracy is being pushed gradually to the back and the new class of bourgeoisie has emerged. At the same time, since the outb
10、reak of the French Revolution in 1789, the social contradictions have sharpened in England due to its influence.In the 18th century England women are handicapped, especially economically, in both the family and the society. This may have much to do with the education young women receive. Women are d
11、eprived of real intellectual education and the world of ideas is thought to be unnecessary to them. Since women do not have as much opportunity to get education as men do, they are largely confined to their families, as daughters before marriage and as wives and mothers after mariage. On the other h
12、and, the educated single women are not more advantageous. They have only two professions open to them: to be an actress or to be a governess. Yet neither is a satisfactory profession. The former provides few opportunities and lots of risks, while the latter is penurious and always looked down upon.
13、Unless a woman has a stable private income from her family, which is a rare case, marriage is the only way for a middle or upper middle class woman to become socially esteemed and economically secure. As Jane Austen wrote in a letter in 1817 that Single women have a dreadful propensity for being poo
14、r-which is on every strong argument in favor of Matrimony. Thus, when money is concenred, women are a dependent class. Before marriage, women depend on their families and after marriage, they rely on their husbands. But Jane Austen was diferent from women at her time, she opposed the primacy masculi
15、ne authority and power. She showed her female consciousness not only in her works but also in her life.II. Origin of FeminismA. Basic Concepts of FeminismFeminism is a modern term. Its a consciously held ideology which opposes consciously held ideologies that maintain the primacy of masculine author
16、ity and power. Feminism is a political perception based on two fundamental premises. Firstly,gender difference is the foundation of a structural inequality between man and women, by which women suffer systematic social injustice. Secondly, the inequality between the sexes is not the result of biolog
17、ical necessity but is produced by the cultural construction of gender differences. This perception provides feminism with its double agenda: to understand the social and psychic mechanisms that construct and perprtuate gender inequality and then to change them.Actually, women have suffered from a lo
18、ng tradition of what is generally called biological essentialism, that is the belief that a womans nature is an inevitable consequence of her reproductive role. What is natural or essential can not be changed in the way that social attributes of character can, hence if biology were actually to rende
19、r women more submissive and less adventurous than men there would be little that anyone could do about it. This kind of essentialistic argument has been used throughout history and acoss societies to justify womens sudordinations, even through what are considered to be essentially feminism chracteri
20、stics vary from culture to culture.B. Feminism in the Eighteenth CenturyThe current phase of feminism is usually seen as originating in the 1960s. Yet, the 1960s were not the beginning of history of womens struggle. Probably since the beginning of cultural organization, many women have been consciou
21、s of the inequality of their position and of the male misrepresentation by which the inequality is maintained.In the eighteenth century there was a feminist tradition in English Novel, although not very distinguished. English fiction in the eighteenth century achieved, among other things, an enlarge
22、ment of the scope of moral discourse, allowing new topics to be considered in new ways. Among the new topics, the moral nature and status of women was one of the most important.Eighteenth-century feminism was not in general specifically concerned with the political equality of women, though it is tr
23、ue that, it carried political implications from the start, first brought out into the open by Catherine Macaulay and Mary Wollstonecrafi in the early 1790s. The feminist impulse showed itself first in its objection to the assignment of women to an inferior status as spiritual and moral beings. The f
24、irst well-articulated female claimed to equality was not directed towards enfranchisement via the ballot box, but to delivery of women from the restrictions which it had pleased male theologians, moral philosophers and poets to impose upon women.Jane Austens novels are the culmination of a line of d
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