Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Gender
- Breaking of gender
stereotypes
- Eleanor reads history books
- Henry knows about fashion
- Catherine doesn't keep a journal or know how to
paint or play and instrument like 'most' girls do
- Sexism, male power and
patriarchy
- In marriage
- It is the men who initiate the
courtship not the women
- Women can only gain
wealth through marriage
- General Tilney's power over Eleanor,
doesn't let her speak for herself
- ‘‘Well, proceed by all means. I know how
much your heart is in it. My daughter, Miss
Morland,’ he continued, without leaving his
daughter time to speak,’ pg. 154
- ‘‘What say you, Eleanor? - speak your opinion, for
ladies can best tell the taste of ladies in regard to
places as well as men. I think it would be
acknowledged by the most impartial eye to have
many recommendations’’ pg. 196
- “women write better letters than men, than that they
sing better duets, or draw better landscapes. In every
power, of which taste is the foundation, excellence is
pretty fairly divided between the sexes." Pg. 22
- Feminism
- Isabella is presented as a strong female
character and does as she wills, yet does not
achieve the marriage she is looking for
- In the end all her goals revolve
around finding security in marriage
- It is not Catherine's beauty or
intellect/skill that wins her the hero, it
is the fact that she has a good heart
- Redefinition of the
stereotypical heroine
(and hero)
- “No one who had ever seen Catherine
Morland in her infancy, would have
supposed her born to be a heroine” Pg. 5
- “and Catherine for many years of
her life, as plain as any” Pg. 5