Embodiment and Compromise of Feminism in 18th and 19th Century Romantic Literature — An Example from Pride and Prejudice

Authors

  • Xinya Wen School of Foreign Languages,Hengyang Normal University,China

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.61360/BoniGHSS242016610706

Keywords:

feminism, romantic literature, Pride and Prejudice

Abstract

As a well-known romantic novel, Pride and Prejudice reflects to a certain extent the changes in female consciousness in the general environment of female literature in the 18th and 19th centuries. This paper will study the historical factors and background of the emergence of feminism in the 18th and 19th centuries based on the development of the characters' stories in the above two books, and explore the deep reasons for the emergence and compromise of feminism in romantic literature.

References

Wu, W. (2000). A test analysis of the women’s writing stance in pride and prejudice. 2000(3).

Austen, J. (1990). Pride and Prejudice (K. Wang, Trans.). Shanghai Literature and Art Publishing House.

Beauvoir. (2011). The Second Sex (K. Zheng, Trans.). Shanghai Translation Publishing House.

Huang, J. (2002). The embodiment of female consciousness in pride and prejudice. Journal of Lanzhou University, 30(6), 125–128.

Fu, S., & Yang, Y. (2020). Literary launching of modern women’s consciousness and two revolutions examination and reflection on pride and prejudice and jane eyre as examples. In Wenzhou University. Wenzhou University.

Zhao, S. (1986). Comparison of dream of the red chamber and pride and prejudice. In Tianjin Normal University. Tianjin Normal University.

Qian, Y., & Chen, X. (n.d.). Between tradition and change--the traceability of british cultural models.

MARCUSSE. (1987). Eros and Civilization. In Shanghai Translation Publishing House (p. 105). Shanghai Translation Publishing House.

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Published

2024-07-25

Issue

Section

Research Article

How to Cite

Embodiment and Compromise of Feminism in 18th and 19th Century Romantic Literature — An Example from Pride and Prejudice. (2024). Journal of Global Humanities and Social Sciences, 5(7), 264-269. https://doi.org/10.61360/BoniGHSS242016610706

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