Jane Austen Research Paper

740 Words3 Pages

Jane Austen is a beloved writer for thousands of readers around the world. Her timeless stories are Still appreciated even two hundred years later. Jane revolutionized writing in the 19th century and currently today still influences the minds of novelists in their own pieces. Unfortunately Jane Austen didn't live to see her glory, but this truth creates a type of beauty to her story. Jane Austen’s work has captured the minds of readers for centuries through her background, writing style, and legacy.

Jane Austen was born December 16, 1775 in England. She was the seventh child, second daughter, of Cassandra and George Austen. The Austen family was well respected among their fellow community. Jane's father, George, faithfully worked …show more content…

Especially when it comes to marriage,money, and social class. Throughout Jane Austen's pieces, we see that she had a slight obsession with marriage. Marriage was a very fickle thing in her time, not at all what we experience in our world today. It was not uncommon for the parents to select a partner for their child. Many daughters married solely for the purpose to please their parents wishes. It seems as if the choosing of a partner was almost handled in a business like manner. In her book Pride and Prejudice and Sense and Sensibility, this practice is clearly in play. Jane Austen died at the age of forty-one, unmarried. Some say that she lived her fairy tale through her books, because she was unfortunate in successful marriage throughout her own life. Or could it be that a woman’s primary purpose was to be a wife in these times? Women did not get to choose from many career fields. Other than teaching, The only other latter option was to raise a family. This could also be another reason why so much emphasis on the importance of marriage was evident through Jane Austen's written characters. Jane’s family social class influenced her novels as well. Jane and her family were members of the gentry, which was the growing middle class or “lower nobility”. She was knowledgeable with the positioning of the people in the gentry and was also familiarized with the form of addressing