Friday, October 25, 2019
Family relationships Essay -- English Literature
Family relationships    It is debatable whether family relationships are central to the novel  ââ¬ËEmmaââ¬â¢ and are indeed the foundations on which Highbury is built.  Families may be viewed as objects of satire, as those featured are a  source of financial rather than emotional support. Throughout the  novel, status is built upon class position, material possession and  finance, its characters eager to display such ââ¬Ëqualitiesââ¬â¢. This essay  shall demonstrate the emphasis placed upon wealth and social status,  identify and interpret corresponding family units, as well as explore  the use of match-making and marital agreements.    The large proportion of families, contradict the perception that  family relationships are the core of the novel and the foundations of  Highbury life. For, families featured are predominantly broken or  incomplete. The Woodhousesââ¬â¢ are one of the more prominent examples of  rich yet emotionally lacking families in Highbury. For, the  relationship between Emma and her father involves constant humouring  on Emmaââ¬â¢s part. Mr Woodhouse is an example of Austenââ¬â¢s use of  exaggerated and satirical humour in order to emphasise the  inadequacies of many families and individual members. With the death  of Emmaââ¬â¢s mother, a governess Ms Taylor acts as a replacement and the  only source of emotional dependence for Emma. However, in light of Ms  Taylorââ¬â¢s marriage to Mr Weston, it can be said that the clear source  of family support and intimacy is removed, deepening the instability  of the Woodhouse family at Hartfield. The absence of strong family  relationships with regards to the Woodhouseââ¬â¢s, reinforce ideas that  relationships are not at the core of society.    The relationship between Mr Weston and his son Frank Churchill...              ...or financial motives. Austen therefore suggests that  many choices were made even though husband and wife did not even  respect each other and indicate the impact of money in society.    Although socially appropriate marriages, according to status are still  apparent by the end of the novel, some superficiality associated with  characters ceases to continue. In particular, Emma with regards to  initial match-making schemes and the initial narrow minded views that  she possesses. Emma and Mr Knightly, Harriet with Mr Martin and Jane  with Frank Churchill contradict the frequent number of marriages based  upon the wrong reasons in the 18th century. There is hope therefore;  that the new families created would have valued the importance of  family relationships to therefore change the foundations of Highbury,  so that they would have indeed become central to the society.                      
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