Pride and Prejudice (Annotated)
Critical Edition with Literary Analysis & Author Biography | Jane Austen | Erato Press
Failed to add items
Add to Cart failed.
Add to Wish List failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
Audible Standard 30-day free trial
Buy for $5.99
-
Narrated by:
-
Virtual Voice
-
By:
-
Jane Austen
This title uses virtual voice narration
The first sentence is a joke. Everything that follows is serious.
"It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife." Jane Austen wrote that in 1813 and it has never stopped being funny — or stopped being true in the specific way that cuts. The sentence is ironic. The society it describes was not.
Pride and Prejudice is a novel about intelligence operating inside a system designed to prevent its exercise. Elizabeth Bennet is the most perceptive person in every room she enters — and the room, being England in 1813, has arranged things so that her only legitimate use of that perception is in the choice of a husband. She makes the choice badly, then correctly, and the novel is the distance between those two moments.
Elizabeth Bennet — She sees clearly, judges quickly, and is wrong about the things that matter most — not because she is foolish, but because she is proud of being right. The novel is her education, which she undergoes with more grace than most.
Mr. Darcy — He is insufferable for exactly the reasons Elizabeth identifies and insufferable for reasons she misses entirely. He is also, in the end, the only person in the novel who changes completely — and does so without being asked.
Mrs. Bennet, Mr. Collins, Lady Catherine de Bourgh — Austen understood that comedy requires victims, and she made hers with the precision of someone who had spent years in rooms with people exactly like this.
✦ Complete and unabridged — all three volumes of the original 1813 text.
This edition also contains:
✦ Afterword — an original critical essay on Pride and Prejudice as a moral and aesthetic achievement: what Austen understood about consciousness, irony, and the novel form that her contemporaries missed ✦ The World of Jane Austen: England in the Age of Revolution — historical context covering the English class system, women's lives under Regency law, the country house economy, and the world that made Elizabeth Bennet's choices both constrained and consequential ✦ Jane Austen: A Life in Letters and Silence — a full critical biography of Austen: the quiet life in Hampshire, the novels written in secret, the early death, and the myth that replaced the woman
For readers who enjoy:
✦ Women's literary fiction with genuine moral and psychological intelligence ✦ Historical romance and Regency fiction (Georgette Heyer, Joanna Trollope, Curtis Sittenfeld) ✦ Classic British novels in carefully edited critical editions ✦ Fiction that is funnier and darker than it first appears
She gave Elizabeth every advantage of mind and none of the advantages that mind requires to act. That was not a flaw in the novel. That was the novel.