Dr Octavia Cox
Dr Octavia Cox
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Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park: How does Fanny Price’s letter expose Sir Thomas Bertram’s corruption?
This video analyses a seemingly tiny detail from Jane Austen’s novel Mansfield Park (1814), concerning Fanny Price’s letter to her brother William Price. Why is it significant that Edmund Bertram declares, “it shall go with the other letters; and, as your uncle [Sir Thomas Bertram] will frank it, it will cost William nothing”? What does it mean to say that Sir Thomas Bertram will “frank” a letter's postage? And from this detail-how Sir Thomas Bertram franks his post-what might be revealed more generally about his character, about the Bertram family, and about the misuse of power? This video also explains what letter ‘crossing’ was in the Regency period, and includes a manuscript example of Jane Austen crossing a letter to her sister Cassandra Austen.
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KEYWORDS
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Letters
Franking
Letter crossing
English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Edmund Bertram
Fanny Price
Franking
Austen English literature analysis
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Sir Thomas Bertram
Переглядів: 22 549

Відео

Jane Austen PERSUASION | How are the Musgroves introduced? What is prosopopoeic ekphrasis?
Переглядів 34 тис.7 місяців тому
How are we introduced to the Musgroves in Jane Austen’s novel Persuasion (1818)? Anne Elliot and Mary Musgrove walk over to the Great House in Uppercross to visit the Musgroves, where the reader meets the characters. But before we meet the Musgroves in person, we are told how their portrait paintings react to the ‘alteration’ and ‘improvement’ of the modern generation. In this lecture, I argue ...
Did Mary Bennet fancy Mr Collins for herself? Jane Austen’s PRIDE AND PREJUDICE style analysis
Переглядів 90 тис.Рік тому
In Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, did Mary Bennet want to marry Mr Collins? What does the answer reveal about Jane Austen’s writing style? In answering the question 'Mary Bennet fancy Mr Collins for herself?' we can see just how brilliant Jane Austen's writing style is because it gives us an excellent example of her technique in creating fictional worlds. In the second half of the video-wit...
JANE AUSTEN’S USE OF ‘WIT’: How does Jane Austen use the word ‘wit’ in her novels?
Переглядів 71 тис.Рік тому
Jane Austen is known and loved for her wit and wittiness. But how did she actually use the term itself in her novels? Examined with close reading of Jane Austen’s novels, and contextualised with 17th, 18th, & 19th century definitions of the word ‘wit’. Here is the link to my article: doi.org/10.3390/h11060132 ‘& Not the Least Wit’: Jane Austen’s Use of ‘Wit’, in Humanities 11:6 (2022) In this v...
JANE AUSTEN’S ZEUGMA JOKES | What is zeugma? And how does Jane Austen use it? LITERARY ANALYSIS
Переглядів 43 тис.Рік тому
Jane Austen is a master literary technician. How does Jane Austen use the literary technique, the device, the figure of speech, zeugma? And what is zeugma? The lecture provides examples (from Pride and Prejudice, Northanger Abbey, & Sense and Sensibility) and analysis of Jane Austen’s uses of zeugma in her novels. JANE AUSTEN LITERARY ANALYSIS If you’d like to support the channel, you can here ...
A little update…
Переглядів 28 тис.Рік тому
A little life and channel update. If you’d like to support the channel, you can here www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=D8LSKGJP2NL4N Follow me on Twitter: DrOctaviaCox CLOSE READING CLASSIC LITERATURE #DrOctaviaCox #CloseReadingClassicLiterature FOR LITERARY ANALYSIS see my ‘Close Reading Classic Literature’ playlist ua-cam.com/play/PLtaJuZ0gvqXU6Pta3cwOxpXMHp9AqxcF1.html KEYWO...
Jane Austen FREDERIC AND ELFRIDA: A NOVEL reading | Juvenilia Writing | 18th Century Literature
Переглядів 10 тис.Рік тому
A reading of Jane Austen’s joyfully silly ‘Frederic and Elfrida: A Novel’. A reading from Jane Austen’s juvenilia writing in Volume the First (written c.1787). What happens to Frederic & Elfrida? What happens to the amiable Rebecca and Captain Roger? What happens to the lovely Charlotte after her two proposals? Who “was in such a hurry to have a succession of fainting fits, that she had scarcel...
EMMA WOODHOUSE: Why is she an unlikeable heroine? - Jane Austen EMMA novel analysis
Переглядів 78 тис.2 роки тому
Why is Emma Woodhouse unlikeable? Jane Austen’s nephew, James Edward Austen Leigh, in his Memoir of Jane Austen (1870) remarked, “She was very fond of Emma, but did not reckon on her being a general favourite; for, when commencing that work, she said, ‘I am going to take a heroine whom no one but myself will much like’”. The lecture compares likeable Elizabeth Bennet, heroine of Jane Austen’s P...
Did Lucy Steele know about Elinor Dashwood? Jane Austen SENSE AND SENSIBILITY novel analysis
Переглядів 77 тис.2 роки тому
Did Jane Austen’s arch schemer Lucy Steele know about Elinor Dashwood as a potential rival for Edward Ferrars’ affections when she went to Barton? Close reading and analysis of Jane Austen’s wonderful novel Sense and Sensibility. JANE AUSTEN SENSE AND SENSIBILITY NOVEL ANALYSIS LUCY STEELE ELINOR DASHWOOD EDWARD FERRARS ENGLISH LITERATURE ANALYSIS If you’d like to support the channel, you can h...
Jane Austen HENRY AND ELIZA: A NOVEL reading | Juvenilia Writing | 18th Century English Literature
Переглядів 10 тис.2 роки тому
A reading of Jane Austen’s playful ‘Henry and Eliza: A Novel’, from her juvenilia writing in Volume the First (written December 1788 - January 1789). How does the fair Eliza fare? A tale of bank-note robbery, elopement, dungeons, & a Man of War. You can see the manuscript here janeausten.ac.uk/manuscripts/index.html JANE AUSTEN READING JANE AUSTEN JUVENILIA JANE AUSTEN WRITING 18th CENTURY ENGL...
LYDIA BENNET: What did Meryton want to happen to her? Jane Austen PRIDE AND PREJUDICE novel analysis
Переглядів 126 тис.2 роки тому
In Jane Austen’s wonderfully sharp novel Pride and Prejudice (1813), what did the gossips of Meryton think should have happened to Lydia Bennet after running off with Mr Wickham? This might shock some people who believe that there is nothing indecorous in Jane Austen’s novels… JANE AUSTEN PRIDE AND PREJUDICE NOVEL ANALYSIS If you’d like to support the channel, you can here www.paypal.com/donate...
OSCAR WILDE ‘A Preface to Dorian Gray’ (1891) context & reading | 19th Century English Literature
Переглядів 9 тис.2 роки тому
A reading of Oscar Wilde’s ‘Preface’ to The Picture of Dorian Gray (published March 1891) prefaced with some historical context: including a scathingly critical review of the novel The Picture of Dorian Gray from the Daily Chronicle (30 June 1890) and Oscar Wilde’s letter to J. S. Little, the Executive Secretary of the Society of Authors, in which he chastised his critics as ignorant and prurie...
Jane Austen THE ADVENTURES OF MR HARLEY reading | 18th Century English Literature-Juvenilia Writing
Переглядів 8 тис.2 роки тому
A reading of Jane Austen’s “interesting Tale” entitled The Adventures of Mr Harley from her juvenilia writing in Volume the First (written c.1790). You can see the manuscript here janeausten.ac.uk/manuscripts/index.html JANE AUSTEN READING JANE AUSTEN JUVENILIA JANE AUSTEN WRITING 18th CENTURY ENGLISH LITERATURE If you’d like to support the channel, you can here www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_but...
George Eliot SILLY NOVELS BY LADY NOVELISTS (1856) reading | 19th Century English Literature
Переглядів 10 тис.2 роки тому
A reading of George Eliot’s classic essay Silly Novels by Lady Novelists, anonymously published in the Westminster Review (October 1856). If you’d like to support the channel, you can here www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=D8LSKGJP2NL4N Follow me on Twitter: DrOctaviaCox CLOSE READING CLASSIC LITERATURE #DrOctaviaCox #UnfamiliarReadings #CloseReadingClassicLiterature FOR LITERA...
Jane Austen ODE TO PITY literary analysis | Jane Austen juvenilia poem-18th Century poetry analysis
Переглядів 12 тис.2 роки тому
Analysis of Jane Austen’s playful poem Ode to Pity (1793), in Volume the First from Austen’s Juvenilia, focusing on allusions to earlier 18th century poetry (especially by William Collins, Joseph Warton, & Thomas Gray). In the lecture I analyse poetry allusions in Jane Austen’s early writing (her poem Ode to Pity) showing ways that Jane Austen pokes fun at literary conventions (much in the same...
Jane Austen reading-A BEAUTIFUL DESCRIPTION OF DIFFERENT EFFECTS OF SENSIBILITY ON DIFFERENT MINDS
Переглядів 9 тис.2 роки тому
Jane Austen reading-A BEAUTIFUL DESCRIPTION OF DIFFERENT EFFECTS OF SENSIBILITY ON DIFFERENT MINDS
Wilfred Owen FUTILITY poem analysis | First World War Poetry | 20th Century English Literature | WW1
Переглядів 7 тис.2 роки тому
Wilfred Owen FUTILITY poem analysis | First World War Poetry | 20th Century English Literature | WW1
WILFRED OWEN’S LETTERS HOME | Autobiography & Poetry | World War One Poetry | Literature Analysis
Переглядів 4,7 тис.2 роки тому
WILFRED OWEN’S LETTERS HOME | Autobiography & Poetry | World War One Poetry | Literature Analysis
E. M. FORSTER on JANE AUSTEN’s novels | Reading of E. M. Forster’s review of Jane Austen
Переглядів 10 тис.2 роки тому
E. M. FORSTER on JANE AUSTEN’s novels | Reading of E. M. Forster’s review of Jane Austen
Jane Austen THE FEMALE PHILOSOPHER reading-Jane Austen Juvenilia Writing-18th Century Literature
Переглядів 6 тис.2 роки тому
Jane Austen THE FEMALE PHILOSOPHER reading-Jane Austen Juvenilia Writing-18th Century Literature
JANE AUSTEN ‘Amelia Webster’ Reading-Jane Austen Juvenilia Writing-18th Century English Literature
Переглядів 4,1 тис.2 роки тому
JANE AUSTEN ‘Amelia Webster’ Reading-Jane Austen Juvenilia Writing-18th Century English Literature
Did LYDIA BENNET always fancy MR WICKHAM? Jane Austen PRIDE AND PREJUDICE analysis
Переглядів 130 тис.2 роки тому
Did LYDIA BENNET always fancy MR WICKHAM? Jane Austen PRIDE AND PREJUDICE analysis
JOHN DRYDEN poem Farewell Ungrateful Traitor-LITERARY CRITICISM & POETRY ANALYSIS-English Literature
Переглядів 8 тис.2 роки тому
JOHN DRYDEN poem Farewell Ungrateful Traitor-LITERARY CRITICISM & POETRY ANALYSIS-English Literature
JANE AUSTEN’S WRITING STYLE: Isabella Thorpe & Indirect Characterization | Northanger Abbey Analysis
Переглядів 67 тис.2 роки тому
JANE AUSTEN’S WRITING STYLE: Isabella Thorpe & Indirect Characterization | Northanger Abbey Analysis
What is an EPIGRAM? What is EPIGRAMMATIC writing? Definition, Meaning, & Examples-LITERARY ANALYSIS
Переглядів 15 тис.2 роки тому
What is an EPIGRAM? What is EPIGRAMMATIC writing? Definition, Meaning, & Examples-LITERARY ANALYSIS
JANE AUSTEN on the Sales, Money, & Profits of her Novels-Publication History of Jane Austen’s Novels
Переглядів 25 тис.2 роки тому
JANE AUSTEN on the Sales, Money, & Profits of her Novels-Publication History of Jane Austen’s Novels
WHAT IS METATEXT? Definition, explanation & examples-metafiction, metanovel, metapoetry, metatheatre
Переглядів 12 тис.2 роки тому
WHAT IS METATEXT? Definition, explanation & examples-metafiction, metanovel, metapoetry, metatheatre
Mr Rushworth’s Guilt | Jane Austen MANSFIELD PARK novel analysis | Mr Rushworth character analysis
Переглядів 82 тис.2 роки тому
Mr Rushworth’s Guilt | Jane Austen MANSFIELD PARK novel analysis | Mr Rushworth character analysis
JOHN KEATS: What is Negative Capability? Explanation, Analysis & Example from John Keats’ poem Lamia
Переглядів 27 тис.2 роки тому
JOHN KEATS: What is Negative Capability? Explanation, Analysis & Example from John Keats’ poem Lamia
JANE AUSTEN & MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT | Sense and Sensibility & A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
Переглядів 25 тис.2 роки тому
JANE AUSTEN & MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT | Sense and Sensibility & A Vindication of the Rights of Woman

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @JCPJCPJCP
    @JCPJCPJCP День тому

    You and John Keats were excellent companions while I was out on a night walk late one evening in early summer. And I thank you for that.

  • @NickMarsh-ke6kq
    @NickMarsh-ke6kq 2 дні тому

    A very interesting view. Of course Jane Austen is a very subtle writer and it is dangerous to underestimate her complexity. However, here, unusually, I am not convinced by your conclusion. Elinor has every right to believe that Edward is in love with her, in spite of the mistake about the hair. (She is not meant at all to be unfeeling and unemotional and the mistake is quite natural in a person in love.) In fact Edward is in love with her in spite of his potentially disastrous prior engagement to Lucy Steele. My view is that Elinor’s “sense” lies not in lack of emotion or lack of a lover’s natural tendency to self deception but to the control she exercises over her deep emotion in contrast to Marianne’s fashionable hysteria. That is shown in the present case by the composure which she forces herself to exhibit on receipt of Lucy’s devastating revelation. Incidentally, a very interesting video could be made discussing which of Jane Austen’s heroine’s or other characters suffers most cruelly. Is it Elinor suffering in silence when she believes that no relationship with Edward is possible after all? Is it Marianne and her unrestrained and life-threatening. reaction to Willoughby’s caddish and selfish treatment of her? Is it Elizabeth Bennet when she realises too late, she thinks, that she actually loves Darcy? Is it Ann Eliot when she is forced to meet Capt. Wentworth again socially, still loving him, but believing that her own ill advised refusal of years ago has ended any possibility of happiness for ever? Is it Emma, for the comparatively short time after she simultaneously realises that she loves Mr Kniightley and that her own meddling actions may mean that it is the unsuitable Harriet who will marry him and the final happy (for her) resolution? Is it Fanny Price watching from afar, invisibly, Edmund’s potentially disastrous dalliance with the amoral Mary? My heart in fact goes out most of all to Jane Fairfax and her long drawn out apparently futile engagement to Frank Churchill while all the while forced in silence to each his play acting flirtations with Emma. Jane Austen has been accused of cruelty. In general I disagree but if there is any cruelty in the novels it is that inflicted on Jane Fairfax - but again even she is made happy in the end. Why some people are apparently not dazzled by Miss Austen I will never understand.

  • @morganjordan198
    @morganjordan198 2 дні тому

    Could money have been another factor? When Lizzy speaks with Darcy's aunt she says that she is not out of her sphere. Mr. Darcy is a gentleman and her father is a gentleman. But your mother! Evidently Mrs. Bennett may have another allurement.

  • @RaysDad
    @RaysDad 3 дні тому

    "No sooner had Eliza entered her dungeon then the first thought which occurred to her, was how to get out of it again. She went to the door, but it was locked." Wonderful!

  • @user-xd7uw6ni6g
    @user-xd7uw6ni6g 3 дні тому

    Stay alive Dr. Octavia

  • @sashaborokowski8029
    @sashaborokowski8029 4 дні тому

    I find Sir Thomas Bertram fascinating. I think if he's had a kind and active wife she would have brought out his better qualities. When he comes back from abroad after being away from his wife and Mrs Norris he acts much more kindly towards Fanny and later realizes his own failings as a parent. It would make an interesting video.

  • @tsapenkopolina
    @tsapenkopolina 4 дні тому

    I would marry Mr. Rushworth. Seriously. Not for love, but for comfort and society. 12.000 per year is a lot. I am sure I would look at it differently if I were 18-20. But now, when I am 39 and have children of my own, I appreciate comfort and financial stability. I would have many children with him and would love them, instead of him :)

  • @amaledition339
    @amaledition339 4 дні тому

    His behaviour is incivil; he owes others some courtesy even if he does not want to. He simply does not want to socielize because he does give himself the trouble. He feels like he is owed civility when he pays none to other people. And spesking behind a lady's back about her looks is pretty bad.

  • @ashleymcgee3536
    @ashleymcgee3536 4 дні тому

    The second I saw the question I knew it was Mr. Collins. He talks too much and had very staunch opinions about what happened to Lydia.

  • @jonahtwhale1779
    @jonahtwhale1779 4 дні тому

    If you did not pay your taxes you could be prominently branded, had your nose or ear cut off, be flogged like a slave or otherwise physically mutilated - as long as you were a man of course! Look up the War of Jenkins Ear - a sailor had his ear cut off for not paying the required duty on his cargo to the Spanish government! Women, especially the parasitic ones - living off the incomes of rich men, were largely spared the unpleasant sides of existance - working, doing unpleasant activities, going hungry, living in rags, substandard housing etc. It is interesting how the lives of these wastrels are so fascinating to their modern day counterparts!

  • @charlotte8879
    @charlotte8879 5 днів тому

    Great synopsis

  • @jonahtwhale1779
    @jonahtwhale1779 5 днів тому

    You are forgetting about debtors prison! And the impact on subsequent life choices! As You quote the goose tradition was about having sufficient money to pay your debts. The significance of This is that jail was the destination of men who could not p ay their debts! Of course this does not really matter because gentklewomen, like Austin, were immune to these considerations - just one of the male privileges of Couverture, that women later objected to!

  • @jonahtwhale1779
    @jonahtwhale1779 5 днів тому

    Why didn't she go to a female book publisher a female book printer, or a female book distributor? If she had had to wait for these things to be available, would we ever have heard about her? Guess she was lucky men had made these opportunities available to her and others!

  • @vsbaretummysugastonguetech1540
    @vsbaretummysugastonguetech1540 5 днів тому

    11:14 Exactly. This is what I wondered too. Like, he could’ve just had his way with her where they were, and no one would’ve been the wiser. Why did he take her with him?

  • @ashleymcgee3536
    @ashleymcgee3536 6 днів тому

    Mrs. Rushworth reminds me Fanny Dashwood. “Oh a cottage! A cottage is always very snug!” And of the cottage that the Dashwood girls rent from Sir John. I wish that rent translated to today’s money. I could do very well in a whole cottage with three rooms and two servants.

  • @madanmohandas108
    @madanmohandas108 6 днів тому

    Great! I love Pope, especially his Homer, and most of his his own stuff, like the above. Thanks for sharing your analysis.

  • @dorohome6796
    @dorohome6796 7 днів тому

    Thank you very much for your explanations absout Jane Austen . I get more and more interested in her modern ❤style.

  • @ashleymcgee3536
    @ashleymcgee3536 8 днів тому

    Truly if Marianne had been able to see through Brandon's gloomy mood and constant state of mourning, she would have found in him the passionate romantic that she saw in Willoughby.

  • @ashleymcgee3536
    @ashleymcgee3536 8 днів тому

    The Bingly girls must have been significantly younger than their brother because they may have just known their father to be rich, but not really have known or been involved in how they got rich, where their older brother might have been involved in the business and trained to take it over if the dad hadn’t made his return on investment. Also, it speaks very much to the ignorance of the Bingley girls that they are not more educated on the importance of Cheapside to English society . Without Cheapside and the mercantile class, nothing is supporting the gentry.

  • @LadyPercy.
    @LadyPercy. 8 днів тому

    Dr Cox is undoubtedly a skilled and learned academic but over a time period of 39 minutes her style becomes distracting. The over use of hand gestures and facial grimaces become increasingly annoying. I also question the need to divulge the death of Heathcliff in the thumbnail.

  • @ashleymcgee3536
    @ashleymcgee3536 8 днів тому

    You can hear Austen’s trepidation for the future. I don’t think she was asking the reader to consider the questions to your point; I think she’s working through this herself. She is not trying to get us to answer the question. People ascribe so much preternatural intelligence to Austen that they forget she was a writer in her time and writers often use their works to help them answer their own questions. As a writer myself, I could easily see her with a pensive, troubled frown as she wrote this, a difficult question in her mind with no easy answer, nor with even any idea that there is a right answer.

  • @michellekeyser8085
    @michellekeyser8085 8 днів тому

    I expect that Mrs jenkins let it all out of the bag about Elinor and Edward immediately upon Lucy’s arrival. She and her son in law spent all their time making embarrassing jokes about it. If Lucy wasn’t sure before she got there she sure did was immediately after

  • @EGChurchofChrist
    @EGChurchofChrist 9 днів тому

    Great analysis of classic literature

  • @Aasveig
    @Aasveig 10 днів тому

    Very nice, thank you. I appreciate your probing Austen's astute and carefully detailed comments and painting such a good picture with them.

  • @celloguy
    @celloguy 10 днів тому

    Beautiful little detail this. Thanks for pointing it out.

  • @hilarydansky1025
    @hilarydansky1025 11 днів тому

    I love the novel and I love your interpretations- it adds so much

  • @Instaraxx
    @Instaraxx 11 днів тому

    Lydia is a dingbat, like her mother. She’s SO selfish. I often find myself thinking about how much I hate her and I hate that so much. Great writing and great acting.

  • @psalmseasytoplayandsingfor3637
    @psalmseasytoplayandsingfor3637 11 днів тому

    Despite you are a terrific argumentation for how Lady Bertram doesn't CARE as much about things and even her husband, but is more going through the motions, underneath it, I think one thing that she is showing is that she DOES CARE about Fanny. And she may even care about her husband more than her words. She is distressed and yet doesn't have the emotional depth to show it well. This was an excellent exploration!

  • @SG-1-GRC
    @SG-1-GRC 12 днів тому

    Here are my suggestions. I thought I would make them before I properly watch the video to see how they compared with it. Possibly the worst marriage was that of General Tilney and his poor wife, the Prices probably come next. Not because of their poverty but largely because of Mr Price's bad habits that exacerbated it. Mrs Price came across as a neglected grass widow. The next worst marriage would surely be the Rushworths, afterall it ended in adultery and separation. Dishonourable mentions The Dashwoods. They bring out the worst in each other when it comes to greed, but they don't seem unhappy with that. I think the Wickhams would not have a good marriage but they wouldn't necessarily have a dreadfully awful one either. George Wickham would probably soon become very disatisfied, but would seek consolation elsewhere. Whilst Lydia would be oblivious to what a hot mess her marriage and not care one bit that she wasn't good at managing the household budget. I think she would get frustrated as Wickham showed less interest in her, that she would also find consolation in other things. Probably gossip and flirtation. Seen from the perspective that marriage is supposed to be union that offers both parties friendship and companionship the Collinses would probably plod along and have an apparently functioning marriage until they got old. Friendship and companionship with your spouse become a lot more important and needful wheb you get older. I suspect that eventually both of them would realise that they didn't have companionship. That they were not friends. This would be particularly difficult to deal with as friends and family passed away or moved on and age related health conditions meant they had to spend more time together in the same house.

  • @JoannaParmenter-qg7iq
    @JoannaParmenter-qg7iq 12 днів тому

    I enjoyed your lecture, Dr Cox, thank you. However, as an educator myself, I would have liked to see more references to his poetry, with perhaps short extracts on screen, to illustrate your points. Students might struggle to remain focused and may not understand the relevance of your talk.

  • @mdelgad01
    @mdelgad01 12 днів тому

    I have watched this video several times. I love this analysis keep up the good work

  • @barbiedesoto7054
    @barbiedesoto7054 13 днів тому

    This makes his comment about the navy bringing persons of obscure birth into undue distinction more silly. Thanks for the thorough explanation. I never get sick of listening to you explain this and give examples of excerpts

  • @gabriellebaalke6704
    @gabriellebaalke6704 13 днів тому

    Like the commenter below, I too would very much enjoy a video essay on Mrs Clay or Anne and Mrs Smith. This friendship is one of my very favourites in Austen.

  • @veeholmes633
    @veeholmes633 13 днів тому

    Brilliant as always. Thank you. I didnt think it was possible but I love Emily Bronte even more now

  • @jonahtwhale1779
    @jonahtwhale1779 13 днів тому

    Yes we can see in modern day Universities and colleges how educating young women leads to moral growth! Because of this education our society has managed to avoid an epidemic of anxiety and depression among young women! Their experience has led the to successful decades long increase in the metrics of life satisfaction for both young and older women. More and more women are successfully establishing their own families. The sale of wine and cat food are at decades lows. Oh, what - wait... what ... They are all wrong? Women are more anxious, depressed, alcohol dependent and less happy? Can't be! Impossible!

  • @deannajoy6131
    @deannajoy6131 13 днів тому

    In addition to what you pointed out, I think Wickham spins his tale rather deftly, because he keeps most of the key points entirely factual. He only materially changes one or two crucial points to turn it in his favor. This is partly because it serves his purpose in setting the scene for Lizzy, but more importantly because it gives him credibility. Skilled liars use mostly truth so that offhand comments or incidental tidbits of information their victims may encounter are likely to appear to support their account. He chose to lie only about the parts that were least likely to be made public and contradict him. This demonstrates just how calculated and adept a liar he really is - his stories are not compulsive and nonsensical, but thoroughly meditated and carefully crafted.

    • @deannajoy6131
      @deannajoy6131 13 днів тому

      Actually, now that I say this in a general sense, I realize that this very thing does happen when Caroline Bingley approaches Lizzy with her caution about Wickham. While Caroline's comments were ignorant in many ways, Wickham's tale-spinning made even an attempt to discredit him appear in his favor instead.

  • @--enyo--
    @--enyo-- 13 днів тому

    8:00 Did we ever get that video on the contents of the rumour?

  • @flannerycrittendon1733
    @flannerycrittendon1733 14 днів тому

    Yeah I always assumed it was Mr. Collins and Lizzy and Charlotte are friends!

  • @dolorescordell129
    @dolorescordell129 15 днів тому

    Seems like Collins was afraid to go back to Huntsford without a wife. Also, Charlotte's marriage to Collins is the vehicle for Lizzy and Darcy to meet again, at Rosings.

  • @veeholmes633
    @veeholmes633 15 днів тому

    Brilliant 😊

  • @veeholmes633
    @veeholmes633 15 днів тому

    Brilliant discussion 😊

  • @devendersinghattri4654
    @devendersinghattri4654 15 днів тому

    I have read Emily's Wuthering Hights.

  • @williammarkland8351
    @williammarkland8351 15 днів тому

    deserved

  • @veeholmes633
    @veeholmes633 15 днів тому

    Brilliant

  • @The_Nixie
    @The_Nixie 15 днів тому

    "hm" - I had always thought the bit about Mary needing advice on Fordyce's was a fib designed to help Lizzy...I didn't really consider that Mary might *actually have asked...

  • @nabanitaroy3000
    @nabanitaroy3000 15 днів тому

    we really want you back 😢

  • @ikahloayza3530
    @ikahloayza3530 15 днів тому

    I always thought it was his revenge against Lizzie after she kind of confronted him and let him know she knew the truth of what had happened between him and Darcy

  • @janelle144
    @janelle144 15 днів тому

    Bottom line is Charlotte Bronte racist writing this about Bertha?

  • @janelle144
    @janelle144 16 днів тому

    Charlotte Bronte's brother must have been her ideas of a man in turmoil. His life was mostly wasted pining for a married woman. Her homelife influenced her writing about men. It was a strange time to live with arranged marriages for money, etc.

  • @amandacarroll2621
    @amandacarroll2621 16 днів тому

    A very thought-provoking episode! I love your insight at the end about both Elinor's reflections and the way Lucy herself reflects society. Excellent!