Comparing Pride And Prejudice And Wuthering Heights

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One of the biggest rivalries in the nineteenth century was between the Bronte sisters and Jane Austen. These women wrote some of the most popular novels in their time that often had very common themes. Emily Bronte's novel Wuthering Heights and Jane Austen's novel Pride and Prejudice both deal with the common theme of social standing, especially in relation to marriages. In Wuthering Heights, Catherine's higher class standing than Heathcliff’s status hinders them from being together. In Pride and Prejudice the gender roles are reversed, and it is Darcy who must deal with being with a woman, Elizabeth Bennet, in a lower standing than he and his family is. The problem of conflicting social classes extends throughout the entirety of the two novels as an obstacle that both couples most overcome in order for them to be together. These novels show how these two couples differed in their reactions to each other of being in a different social class, and how this affected their love in the end.
The theme of social standing seems to be very pertinent to the time …show more content…

What a fine thing for our girls!" (1. 13) For Mrs. Bennet and for a few of her daughters, particularly Kitty and Lydia, this was a wish come true. All any of the women wished to achieve was a marriage in which the daughters would be taken care of and well protected. However, why would someone of a higher class wish to marry someone they would have to take care of instead of someone who was as well off as they were, something that holds back Catherine from marrying Heathcliff, as she so clearly declares when she states, "It would degrade me to marry Heathcliff now." (9.92) As much as those from the lower classes wanted to move up in rank, many of those in the upper classes would not have deigned to marry someone not of their equal rank or higher. Although in some cases, it seems that love is able trump all, even with this issue of a lower social

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