Joke Collection Website - Cold jokes - How Emma struggles and compromises with society in Jane Austen's Emma

How Emma struggles and compromises with society in Jane Austen's Emma

Perhaps no novel dwarfs Austen's "Emma" in terms of comic effect. This is a unique work of genius. The style of the work is not pretentious, but while narrating events, it touches the reader's heart itch just right from time to time. With her delicate and sensitive female wisdom, uncompromising attitude, confident moral consciousness, and unscrupulous courage, Austen uses romantic techniques to praise truth, goodness, and beauty in her works, and denounces falsehood and evil. Undoubtedly, it touched those of the same generation who were similar to the characters in the work.

"Emma" is Jane Austen's best, most mature and most representative novel. Like Austen's other works, it focuses on trivial matters of ordinary people, and the scenes and plots are mostly dull, but it creates an effect that makes readers fascinated and unable to put down the book. "Emma" does not have thrilling plots or sensational descriptions, but its eloquent and intoxicating narrative, its enigmatic plot, and its meticulous attention to character and psychology In the depiction, the reader seems to be unfolding a beautiful and slightly exaggerated vivid animation scroll. We seem to be able to see the images and behaviors of the characters in the story, hear their conversations in various backgrounds, and feel the joy and sorrow of the characters. The various aspects of British society at that time seem to have been personally experienced by the readers.

Jane Austen is one of the few famous female writers in the world, a "little painter" and a "family novelist" between neoclassicism and the lyricism of the Romantic movement. A British writer who is considered by literary critics to be on a par with Shakespeare in terms of immortality.

Main content: Emma is a beautiful, smart and wealthy young girl. Because she has such unique conditions, she can't help but do whatever she wants. Emma was born in a squire family in Heber Village. Her mother died early. She grew up under the education of Miss Taylor, a governess. Later, Miss Taylor married Mr. Weston and left the Aidao family. She had made up her mind not to get married, but she was keen on being a matchmaker for others. She often made random arrangements based on whims or impulses, not according to reason, but as a result she made many jokes and suffered a lot. However, although Emma did not find a match for others, she eventually fell in love and got married to Mr. Knightley. Together with two other young couples, Emma's comic ending was formed.

In Emma, ??minor/marginalized characters reveal Jane Austen’s views on class

hierarchy, women Dilemma, and the Critique of the Search for Personal Freedom. As shown in Michel Foucault's theory of power

the concept of rupture, discontinuity and gap is between the dominant ideology and the suppressed ideology

Important basis for how interactions work. My research focuses not only on the main text, but also on the subtexts that are hidden but not revealed. If Jane Austen's situation as a female writer is taken into consideration, it is not difficult to understand that female writers in the nineteenth century had to cover up the subtext when writing. Beneath the surface story, these

hidden secondary texts contain deeper meanings that are not acceptable to society.

However, in the ending of "Emma", the conflicts and differences hidden in the secondary text are eliminated and integrated into the primary text.

Jane Austen uses the art of compromise to solve the problems presented in the novel. These oppressed ideologies are not eliminated naturally and peacefully, but are suppressed and forced into hiding. Because Jane Austen was not a radical novelist or a reformer

. "Emma" conveys her views on contemporary society: individuals must make wise choices and negotiations in order to integrate into society. Compromise

Compromise is Jane Austen's writing technique to survive in the Victorian era.

After all, what she cares about is not how to

transform society, but how to survive with it.