Patriarchy: Frances Burney As A Feminist Novel

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Frances Burney’s Evelina values the struggle of a woman enduring the harsh patriarchal society of Great Britain in the eighteenth century; Evelina is constantly attacked, verbally or physically, by men and women alike and it is because of her active refusal to be made into a victim that many people label Burney’s work as a feminist novel. While Burney is making many claims about the ill treatment of women, she never claims that women should be equal to men. She directly writes Evelina under the care of Villars and later in a marriage with Lord Orville, both of whom are strong patriarchal figures. Because Evelina remains under the care of such men, she is excused from her malign treatment by men. Readers find her worthy of sympathy, which encourages …show more content…

The scene in which Evelina requests some figure of provision to “raise and support [her] with others” happens when she states that Mrs. Selwyn is “so much occupied in conversation” that she cannot help Evelina (242). These words perform perfectly in rebuffing women who chose to ignore social convention and eagerly speak their minds. Again, Evelina encourages the patriarchal idea that women are without valuable thought and thus, should not voice their ideas or opinions in the presence of company. Evelina is desperate to remain in the good graces of those around her and thus, admonishes Mrs. Selwyn in her letter to Mr. Villars to show that she is still respecting the societal rules, which are sympathetic to patriarchal control. When Evelina admonishes Mrs. Selwyn for rejecting the rules of conversation and society and begging for Mr. Villars approval in all of her actions, she is functioning under the patriarchy. This seemingly youthful and naïve hope is what makes it possible for Evelina to rebuff those that attempt to harm her because she is writing of the horrors to Mr. Villars and asking him, directly or indirectly, if it is acceptable that she rejects such

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