Themes in Mansfield Park: Love, Family, and Society

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Mansfield Park (IV)
 
British Empire: Its Order and Boundaries
Chap 37-48 (Vol III: 6-17)
& 
Conclusion
 
Looked at him for a moment in speechless admiration. ~ Volume III, Chapter VII (38)
Fanny was obliged to introduce him. ~ Volume III, Chapter X (41)
The joyful consent which met Edmund's application ~ Volume III, Chapter XVII (48)  
Image Source
Fanny looking at
 
Tom’s sketch book (Film, Patricia Rozema)
 
Outline
 
General Intro & Discussion Questions
1.
*Stories of Love and Education
Fanny’s and Edmund’s Love
Henry’s & Mary’s Changes: Why?
2.
Family Relations: Fanny at “Home”
3.
*Social Circles:  Catastrophes and
Solutions
4.
Empire: Boundaries of Different Kinds
5.
Conclusion: Happy Ending?
 
Housekeeping
 
Workstation Group 
Discussion with Kate:
this or next week, definitely before mid-
term
Deadline for 
Workstation work plan
(including job division) & ppt
: 4/23
 
Showtime: 
topics 4/7 ~5/12
Journal 2 4/28 ~ 5/14(Sat); Journal 3 5/9
(Mon)
undefined
Home, Society & Empire defined in terms of
-- Family Relations
-- Love Relations
-- Boundaries of Social Propriety set after social
exchanges  & transgression
boundaries
: geographic (places, ha-ha), class, moral conduct
(gratitude & constancy vs. speculation & conquest)
Home, Society and Empire
Why does Henry change his mind?
Where is Fanny’s Home?
 
MP Themes:
More than
Marriage Plot
 
(1)
Story of Fanny
-- Education and Improvement:
How is it a Pygmalion story?
--  Fanny’s Love (& Edmund’s)
(2) 
Story of Families
: Family Relations &
Influences
(3) 
Social Circles & Games 
in MP vs. those
in London
(4) 
Gains & Failures
 
at the Center and
Peripheries of British Empire
 
Ref. 
class & marriage
public and private space
Social Mobility
undefined
Mansfield Park:
In Historical Contexts
Regency Period (1811-1820) :
Vanity World
French Rev. 1789
Romanticism late 18
th
 C – 1820’s
Oct 1810 
-- Sir Thomas and Tom leave for Antigua (Fanny age 16); 
Sept 1811 – Tom returns,
April 1812
 
--
 
Sir Thomas writes home ; 
late October 1812 
 
Sir
 
Thomas returns,
Dec. 1812 
-- The ball at Mansfield Park
Jan 1813 – Henry’s proposals; The Crawfords leave Mansfield;
Feb 1813 -- Fanny and William leave Mansfield Park and reaches Portsmouth; M’s
letter
March 1813 -- Fanny had been nearly four weeks from Mansfield. Henry walks into
the room.  M’s letter; Lady Bertram's letter announcing Tom's illness.
April 1813 – M’s two letters; early May – Edmund’s letter & Fanny’s return
Summer 1813 -- Edmund turns to Fanny
The Wards’ marriages 1780’s
Fanny
 birth 1780’s
Fanny (age 10) to MP 1790’s
The Crawfords
’ and
Rushworth
’s appearance
 
PP (1813)
vs.
MP (1814)
 
Pride & Prejudice: “
The work is rather too light, and bright,
and sparkling; it wants [i.e. needs] shade; 
it wants to be
stretched out here and there with a long chapter of sense, if it
could be had…”
 
References
made to
British
Colonialism
 
1)
Sir Thomas goes to Antigua to fix some problems
 the wealth of MP founded in colonial
exploitation
2)
He is back, “communicative and chatty” about the
trip.  But when Fanny asks about the slave trade,
there is 
“a dead silence” 
(chap 21: 136)
3)
 Lady Bertrams askes William to bring back from
India two shawls  (chap 31: 208)
Colonialism:
a)
conquest
b)
breaking of geographical boundaries;
expansion/imposition of British culture (values)
c)
exploitation (of natural and human resources;
slavery)
d)
expansion of the empire and loss of control
MP
 
Group
Discussion
Questions:
Your
Choice
(1) Stories of Love & Education
 values represented
1.
G3 Edmund’s Love: 
Why does Edmund love Mary?  What in Mary that he
learns to reject?  Is Fanny a good replacement?
2.
G1 Mary’s Choice: 
How is Mary’s personality revealed in her talk and letters?
(see next slide)
3.
G2 Fanny’s Love: 
Why does Fanny reject Henry? Does he improve himself
when wooing Fanny and how?  Is Fanny’s waiting for Ed. worthwhile?
4.
G9 Henry’s Choice:
 How and why does he change?
5.
G6 The Other Characters
: How is Susan educated? And Julia improved?   Why
is Maria irredeemable?
(2) 
Story of Families
: 
Family Relations & Influences
6. G4  Describe Fanny’s feelings for her two homes (MP & Portsmouth)
7. G7 What are the problems with Mrs. Norris? Why is she banished from MP to live
with Maria at the end?
(3) 
Social Circles & Games 
in MP vs. those in London
8. G 10 How is London described and how does it change Henry and Mary
respectively?
(4) 
Gains & Failures
 
at the Center and Peripheries of British Empire
9. G8 How does Sir Thomas reflect on his own success and failure in educating his
children?
10. G 5 Do all the characters put on the margins deserve such treatments by the
novel?
 
Group
Discussion
 
 
1  
Leader or Reader
1-2  
Summarizer (choose the chapters,
too) & Style Analyst (3 examples)
3-4 (7)  
Commentator
 
& Quotations
as evidence
5-6  
Connector –theme and related
examples from the other parts of the
novel
 
Mary’s Letters
& Witticism
 
Her Witticism:
“Selfishness must always be forgiven you know, because there’s
no hope of a cure” (7: 49).
“Every body is taken in at some period or other” (5: 34)
upholding “the true London maxim, that every thing is to be got
with money” (6: 43)
“where the natural taste is equal, the player must always be
best off, for she is gratified in more ways than one” (6: 43)
Mary’s behavior: 
at the family theatrical, Sotherton episode,
Speculation game, the ball (& necklace), discussion of Henry’s
wooing & proposal,  Tom’s illness & Maria’s elopement
Mary’s letters:
1) letters to Fanny (actually for Edmund 38: 255)
2) report on the meeting of Maria & Henry (40: 267)
3) about Henry’s visit; people & parties in London; & “no news”
from Edmund (43: 281) ;
4) about Tom’s illness (45);
5) about the scandal (46)
undefined
 
 
Plot Summary:
Chap 37-
 
 
 
source
.
 
 
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Plot Summary:
Chap 37-
 
 
 
source
.
 
 
 
1. Edmund’s
Love &
Judgment
 
Edmund’s 
faulty 
decision & judgment:
 of F’s living with Mrs. Norris; of joining the play;
 of F’s refusal to marry Henry
 of sending F back home
 of proposing to Mary (in person or letter)
Edmund’s letters (chap 44; 45)
1
st
 about Mary’s changes; about their
interconnections, and ways of proposing to
Mary 
(still seeing Mary as the only person he
considers as wife)*
2
nd
 letter about Tom, and his wanting to go to
London
3
rd
 letter about Julia’s elopement
Edmund’s final revelation (next slide)
 
2. Mary’s
Choice
 
She is witty, sociable, athletic, beautiful, but also
materialist, calculative and 
“liberal”
about Tom’s illness (45) 
 “two poor young men less”
(294) (Maybe Tom and Edmund)
Her interpretation of Henry and Maria’s behavior:
Calm about it (“no modest loathings”)
 
a folly rather than vice
; folly in being detected
Fanny’s fault
; otherwise, theirs would end in
regular standing flirtation in yearly meetings
(309)
suggesting
 her lack of principles
 solution: persuade Henry to marry Maria, ask the
father to be quiet
When Edmund says goodbye to her, she responds
in different ways, suggesting the 
many sides of
her personality
.  A. She turns red; B. playfully sees
Edmund’s rejection of her as another sermon; C.
tries to keep Edmund. (310-11)*
 
3. Fanny’s Love
& Growth
 
Diffident 
 self-expressive and principled
However, she remains 
quietly and passively in love 
with
Edmund despite his wrong decisions, his misunderstanding
of her, his confidences, and his self-centeredness (303)
Her struggles:
Turning down Henry’s proposals at least 3 times
getting away from MP, to avoid seeing Edmund’s proposal
 outbursts 
after getting Edmund’s letter about his
indecisiveness (44: 287)
Her dilemma in taking the ride of the Crawfords or not.
her joy of going home (while watching Edmund suffer)
 Happy to be useful, beloved and that Ed is no longer
duped by Mary
MP: 
“dear” and “perfect”  
(
a disciplined subject
;
Portsmouth: later)
 
4. Henry’s Love
for Fanny: His
Changes
 
His reasons: not only her appearance but also her
virtues.
His changes at Portsmouth ( chap 41-42)
 all attentive to her, avoids embarrassing Fanny by not
joining their dinner
 talks about MP positively
 improved: more considerate*
Open to the charms of nature;
Discusses his work at Norfolk, asks for Fanny’s advice
 the only friend from MP, he offers to pick F up
His problems:
 changefulness
 love of conquest (chap 48: 317)
 
     Fanny might have married him (Susan would then live with
them)
 
5. The Other
Characters’
Education
 
 
Susan
 – another Fanny, ill-mannered first and
then receives education from Fanny; 
takes
Fanny’s place at MP
 
Julia – 
ill educated, but can be improved
because she is humble and repentant
because Mr. Yates is acceptable (willing to be
guided; domestic and quiet, not as much debts as
expected
Mr. Yates: “
He was not very solid; 
but there was a
hope of his becoming less trifling—of his being at
least tolerably domestic and quiet; and, at any
rate, there was comfort in finding his estate
rather more, and his debts much less
, than he
had feared, and in being consulted and treated as
the friend best worth attending to.”
 
6. Fanny in
Portsmouth
(chap 38-46)
 
Chap 38 -39: Fanny ignored and disappointed
Thrush is their only subject -- 
MP by comparison
*
Her mother compared to LB and Mrs. Norris (265)
 
incessant noise
*
 
not accepted by local community either. 
*
 When Henry comes: Fanny feels 
shame
 (273)
When MP is in trouble, 
Fanny wants to go
“home” more, and starts to talk about MP as
home
 (45: 293)
Fanny’s view of the family disorder (46: 298)
The Prices, on the other hand, are indifferent to
MP’s ordeals
.
 
7. Outsiders (1):
Mrs. Norris  &
Maria
 
1. Mrs. Norris: “altered creature, quieted,
stupified, indifferent to every thing that
passed” (47: 304) ; sees Fanny as “demon
of the piece” (304)
2. After all, she takes responsibility for
Maria
3. LB: sees Maria as “a disgrace never to
be wiped off”; Sir Thomas: Maria’s
character can never be restored
 
8. Outsiders (2)
The  Frasers,
The Stornaway,
The Owens
 
All husband-chasers and pursuers of
money
They compete with or are jealous about
one another.
 
9. MP: Order
Resumed
under Sir
Thomas
 
Sir Thomas:
1)
Blames himself for being too severe
(while Mrs. Norris is indulgent and
flattering)
2)
Not teaching them principle or
modesty (self-denial and humanity 314);
not understanding them.
3)
Rejecting Mrs. Norris as “an hourly evil”;
rejects Maria, too.
4)
 still happy with his own achievements*
 
10.  The Other
Outsiders
 
 The family at Portsmouth?
 The Grants?
 The people in Antigua?
undefined
 
Mansfield Park
 
Conclusion
 
Happy Ending?
Yes.
Let other pens dwell on
guilt and misery. 
I quit such
odious subjects as soon as I
can, impatient to restore
every body, not greatly in
fault themselves, to
tolerable comfort
, and to
have done with all the rest.”
 
“Improvement of the Estate and its residents” –all but Lady
Bertram
Edmund 
– getting over Mary, finds in “Fanny’s warm and
sisterly regard for him” a good foundation for marriage. The
two returns to MP (319)
Sir Thomas
—1) reflects on his parenting failure; 2) 
happy
 to
have Fanny as his daughter, and William and Susan as his
protégés, while firm in rejecting Maria.
Julia
 – comes home and Mr. Yates improved (313)
Tom -- 
recovered and became a dutiful and better-behaved
son.
 
Happy Ending?
No.
Let other pens dwell on
guilt and misery. 
I quit such
odious subjects as soon as I
can, impatient to restore
every body, not greatly in
fault themselves, to
tolerable comfort, and to
have done with all the rest.”
 
Mr. Rushworth-
- gets a speedy divorce from Maria; waits
to marry a young woman. 
 marriage as possession &
exchange continued elsewhere
The Frasers – superficial 
party-goers, competitive on
marriage market
 
The Grants-
- moved away from Mansfield Park 
 a stall in
Westminster & residence in London
Mrs. Norris
—subdued and goes to join Maria, the two’s
temperament mutual punishment for each other
Maria 
– with 
high spirit and strong passions for Henry,
does not get to marry Henry, as the two grow to hate each
other.
Henry
--ends up in wretchedness and self-reproach. (His
desire for conquest described)
Mary -- continues to live with Mrs. Grant. It takes her a long
time to find a good match (definitely not a younger son;
318) *
undefined
 
 
Ending in 
Mansfield Park: 
Order re-constructed
undefined
 
 
Ending in 
Mansfield Park: 
Insiders vs. 
Outsiders
 
PLAN OF an
ESTATE
 AT
MILLBANK
WESTMINSTER
belonging to THE
MARQUIS OF
SALISBURY
(
source
)
British Library
Online Gallery
 
 
Social
Background
References
 
Book: 
Jane Austen: The World of Her
Novels
.   Deirdre Le Faye. Frances Lincoln,
2002. (See Google drive)
Marriage:
 
courtship and marriage
 
Courting and Marriage in the Regency
Estate:
What is a Country House
?
 Images: 
Filming Locations of the Houses &
Other Settings
Slide Note

Portsmouth episode: Henry and Fanny’s yes and change of mind– R: 1:08 (starling's " let me out, let me out")-- 1:18

Slavery R: 1:27

Mp3: 41-44 –32:53 Mary; 45:55 Edmund; 53:45Fanny; 61:40 LB (Maureen O'Brien)

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Explores various themes in Jane Austen's Mansfield Park, focusing on love, family dynamics, social circles, and the concept of empire. Through character interactions and societal boundaries, the novel delves into themes of social propriety, relationships, and personal growth. Workstation discussions and analysis of character motivations contribute to a deeper understanding of the narrative.

  • Literature
  • Jane Austen
  • Mansfield Park
  • Themes
  • Society

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  1. Fanny,Henry & her Family Fanny & William Mansfield Park (IV) British Empire: Its Order and Boundaries Chap 37-48 (Vol III: 6-17) & Conclusion Fanny re. Tom s sketches (R. film) Fanny & Edmund Looked at him for a moment in speechless admiration. ~ Volume III, Chapter VII (38) Fanny was obliged to introduce him. ~ Volume III, Chapter X (41) The joyful consent which met Edmund's application ~ Volume III, Chapter XVII (48) Image Source Fanny looking atTom s sketch book (Film, Patricia Rozema)

  2. General Intro & Discussion Questions 1. *Stories of Love and Education Fanny s and Edmund s Love Henry s & Mary s Changes: Why? 2. Family Relations: Fanny at Home 3. *Social Circles: Catastrophes and Solutions 4. Empire: Boundaries of Different Kinds 5. Conclusion: Happy Ending? Outline

  3. Workstation Group Discussion with Kate: this or next week, definitely before mid- term Deadline for Workstation work plan (including job division) & ppt: 4/23 Showtime: topics 4/7 ~5/12 Journal 2 4/28 ~ 5/14(Sat); Journal 3 5/9 (Mon) Housekeeping

  4. Why does Henry change his mind? Where is Fanny s Home? Home, Society & Empire defined in terms of -- Family Relations -- Love Relations -- Boundaries of Social Propriety set after social exchanges & transgression boundaries: geographic (places, ha-ha), class, moral conduct (gratitude & constancy vs. speculation & conquest) Home, Society and Empire

  5. (1) Story of Fanny -- Education and Improvement: How is it a Pygmalion story? -- Fanny s Love (& Edmund s) Social Mobility MP Themes: More than Marriage Plot (2) Story of Families: Family Relations & Influences (3) Social Circles & Games in MP vs. those in London (4) Gains & Failures at the Center and Peripheries of British Empire Empire: Antigua & India MP vs. London Family MP vs. Portsmouth Ref. class & marriage public and private space Fanny vs. Mary Edmund vs. Henry

  6. French Rev. 1789 Romanticism late 18th C 1820 s Regency Period (1811-1820) : Vanity World 1805-1809 1807 1811-13;14 Austen homeless Writing & Publication of MP Abolition of the Slave Trade Act The Wards marriages 1780 s Fanny birth 1780 s Fanny (age 10) to MP 1790 s Oct 1810 -- Sir Thomas and Tom leave for Antigua (Fanny age 16); Sept 1811 Tom returns, April 1812 --Sir Thomas writes home ; late October 1812 SirThomas returns, Dec. 1812 -- The ball at Mansfield Park Jan 1813 Henry s proposals; The Crawfords leave Mansfield; Feb 1813 -- Fanny and William leave Mansfield Park and reaches Portsmouth; M s letter March 1813 -- Fanny had been nearly four weeks from Mansfield. Henry walks into the room. M s letter; Lady Bertram's letter announcing Tom's illness. April 1813 M s two letters; early May Edmund s letter & Fanny s return Summer 1813 -- Edmund turns to Fanny The Crawfords and Rushworth s appearance Mansfield Park: In Historical Contexts

  7. Pride & Prejudice: The work is rather too light, and bright, and sparkling; it wants [i.e. needs] shade; it wants to be stretched out here and there with a long chapter of sense, if it could be had Elizabeth: Witty like Mary Fanny PP (1813) vs. MP (1814) Rejects Collins, a clergyman Rejects Henry Marries Darcy, an estate owner Marries Edmund

  8. 1) Sir Thomas goes to Antigua to fix some problems the wealth of MP founded in colonial exploitation 2) He is back, communicative and chatty about the trip. But when Fanny asks about the slave trade, there is a dead silence (chap 21: 136) 3) Lady Bertrams askes William to bring back from India two shawls (chap 31: 208) Colonialism: a) conquest b) breaking of geographical boundaries; expansion/imposition of British culture (values) c) exploitation (of natural and human resources; slavery) d) expansion of the empire and loss of control References made to British Colonialism MP

  9. (1) Stories of Love & Education G3 Edmund s Love: Why does Edmund love Mary? What in Mary that he learns to reject? Is Fanny a good replacement? 2. G1 Mary s Choice: How is Mary s personality revealed in her talk and letters? (see next slide) 3. G2 Fanny s Love: Why does Fanny reject Henry? Does he improve himself when wooing Fanny and how? Is Fanny s waiting for Ed. worthwhile? 4. G9 Henry s Choice: How and why does he change? 5. G6 The Other Characters: How is Susan educated? And Julia improved? Why is Maria irredeemable? (2) Story of Families: Family Relations & Influences 6. G4 Describe Fanny s feelings for her two homes (MP & Portsmouth) values represented 1. Group Discussion Questions: Your Choice 7. G7 What are the problems with Mrs. Norris? Why is she banished from MP to live with Maria at the end? (3) Social Circles & Games in MP vs. those in London 8. G 10 How is London described and how does it change Henry and Mary respectively? (4) Gains & Failures at the Center and Peripheries of British Empire 9. G8 How does Sir Thomas reflect on his own success and failure in educating his children? 10. G 5 Do all the characters put on the margins deserve such treatments by the novel?

  10. 1 Leader or Reader 1-2 Summarizer (choose the chapters, too) & Style Analyst (3 examples) 3-4 (7) Commentator & Quotations as evidence 5-6 Connector theme and related examples from the other parts of the novel Group Discussion

  11. Her Witticism: Selfishness must always be forgiven you know, because there s no hope of a cure (7: 49). Every body is taken in at some period or other (5: 34) upholding the true London maxim, that every thing is to be got with money (6: 43) where the natural taste is equal, the player must always be best off, for she is gratified in more ways than one (6: 43) Mary s behavior: at the family theatrical, Sotherton episode, Speculation game, the ball (& necklace), discussion of Henry s wooing & proposal, Tom s illness & Maria s elopement Mary s Letters & Witticism Mary s letters: 1) letters to Fanny (actually for Edmund 38: 255) 2) report on the meeting of Maria & Henry (40: 267) 3) about Henry s visit; people & parties in London; & no news from Edmund (43: 281) ; 4) about Tom s illness (45); 5) about the scandal (46)

  12. Fanny does not miss the Crawfords. William comes to MP, but is out of uniform. Fanny is happy to go to her parents'. 37 Fanny glad to be away from being an apparent receiver of Mary s letters; Portsmouth. Home at last small, noisy TheThrushhas gone out of harbour. Fanny ignored; the children noisy; Betsey has a silver knife. 38 Noise and confusion; Fanny disappointed at her parents. William and Sam go to sea. 39 A letter from Mary about the London society (including Maria). Susan becomes a friend. Another silver knife. Fanny joins a library. 40 Henry comes to visit the Prices, with news about Edmund s going to London They all take a walk to the dock-yard. Henry talks about his work at Norfolk 41 Plot Summary: Chap 37- Crawford joins them and goes to church. He offers to take Fanny to Mansfield in his carriage. Should he go home to take care of business? He knows what he ought to do. 42 source

  13. Marys letter: that Mrs. Rushworth's first party was a success, and to offer her brother's carriage again. A party will keep Henry from Everingham. Fanny more impatient for the result of Ed s proposal 43 Edmund finally writes. He tells of his dissatisfaction. She is the only woman in the world whom he could ever think of. Fanny s soliloquy (287) LB s letters: Tom Bertram is ill. Lack of sympathy at the Prices. 44 Tom is back at Mansfield, and his brother takes care of him. Fanny knows where her home is (293). Mary s letter: asking about Tom's condition; the two sisters indifferent. 45 Mary s letter: about a most scandalous, ill-natured rumour 3 months; Mr. Price reads about it on the newspaper. Edmund s letter, about Julia s elopement, and to say he is coming for the Price sisters. 46 The whole truth is known. Edmund describes his meeting with Miss Crawford; the charm is broken, his eyes are opened. 47 Plot Summary: Chap 37- Let other pens dwell on guilt and misery (but Sir Thomas was longest to suffer.) Everyone gets what they deserve. (next slide) 48 source

  14. Edmunds faulty decision & judgment: of F s living with Mrs. Norris; of joining the play; of F s refusal to marry Henry of sending F back home of proposing to Mary (in person or letter) Edmund s letters (chap 44; 45) 1stabout Mary s changes; about their interconnections, and ways of proposing to Mary (still seeing Mary as the only person he considers as wife)* 2nd letter about Tom, and his wanting to go to London 3rdletter about Julia s elopement Edmund s final revelation (next slide) 1. Edmund s Love & Judgment

  15. She is witty, sociable, athletic, beautiful, but also materialist, calculative and liberal about Tom s illness (45) two poor young men less (294) (Maybe Tom and Edmund) Her interpretation of Henry and Maria s behavior: Calm about it ( no modest loathings ) a folly rather than vice; folly in being detected Fanny s fault; otherwise, theirs would end in regular standing flirtation in yearly meetings (309) suggesting her lack of principles solution: persuade Henry to marry Maria, ask the father to be quiet When Edmund says goodbye to her, she responds in different ways, suggesting the many sides of her personality. A. She turns red; B. playfully sees Edmund s rejection of her as another sermon; C. tries to keep Edmund. (310-11)* 2. Mary s Choice

  16. Diffident self-expressive and principled However, she remains quietly and passively in love with Edmund despite his wrong decisions, his misunderstanding of her, his confidences, and his self-centeredness (303) Her struggles: Turning down Henry s proposals at least 3 times getting away from MP, to avoid seeing Edmund s proposal outbursts after getting Edmund s letter about his indecisiveness (44: 287) Her dilemma in taking the ride of the Crawfords or not. her joy of going home (while watching Edmund suffer) Happy to be useful, beloved and that Ed is no longer duped by Mary MP: dear and perfect (a disciplined subject; Portsmouth: later) 3. Fanny s Love & Growth

  17. His reasons: not only her appearance but also her virtues. His changes at Portsmouth ( chap 41-42) all attentive to her, avoids embarrassing Fanny by not joining their dinner talks about MP positively improved: more considerate* Open to the charms of nature; Discusses his work at Norfolk, asks for Fanny s advice the only friend from MP, he offers to pick F up His problems: changefulness love of conquest (chap 48: 317) 4. Henry s Love for Fanny: His Changes Fanny might have married him (Susan would then live with them)

  18. Susan another Fanny, ill-mannered first and then receives education from Fanny; takes Fanny s place at MP Julia ill educated, but can be improved because she is humble and repentant because Mr. Yates is acceptable (willing to be guided; domestic and quiet, not as much debts as expected Mr. Yates: He was not very solid; but there was a hope of his becoming less trifling of his being at least tolerably domestic and quiet; and, at any rate, there was comfort in finding his estate rather more, and his debts much less, than he had feared, and in being consulted and treated as the friend best worth attending to. 5. The Other Characters Education

  19. Chap 38 -39: Fanny ignored and disappointed Thrush is their only subject -- MP by comparison* Her mother compared to LB and Mrs. Norris (265) incessant noise* not accepted by local community either. * When Henry comes: Fanny feels shame (273) When MP is in trouble, Fanny wants to go home more, and starts to talk about MP as home (45: 293) Fanny s view of the family disorder (46: 298) The Prices, on the other hand, are indifferent to MP s ordeals. 6. Fanny in Portsmouth (chap 38-46)

  20. 1. Mrs. Norris: altered creature, quieted, stupified, indifferent to every thing that passed (47: 304) ; sees Fanny as demon of the piece (304) 2. After all, she takes responsibility for Maria 3. LB: sees Maria as a disgrace never to be wiped off ; Sir Thomas: Maria s character can never be restored 7. Outsiders (1): Mrs. Norris & Maria

  21. All husband-chasers and pursuers of money They compete with or are jealous about one another. 8. Outsiders (2) The Frasers, The Stornaway, The Owens

  22. Sir Thomas: 1) Blames himself for being too severe (while Mrs. Norris is indulgent and flattering) 2) Not teaching them principle or modesty (self-denial and humanity 314); not understanding them. 3) Rejecting Mrs. Norris as an hourly evil ; rejects Maria, too. 4) still happy with his own achievements* 9. MP: Order Resumed under Sir Thomas

  23. The family at Portsmouth? The Grants? The people in Antigua? 10. The Other Outsiders

  24. Mansfield Park Conclusion

  25. Improvement of the Estate and its residents all but Lady Bertram Edmund getting over Mary, finds in Fanny s warm and sisterly regard for him a good foundation for marriage. The two returns to MP (319) Sir Thomas 1) reflects on his parenting failure; 2) happy to have Fanny as his daughter, and William and Susan as his prot g s, while firm in rejecting Maria. Julia comes home and Mr. Yates improved (313) Tom -- recovered and became a dutiful and better-behaved son. Happy Ending? Yes. Let other pens dwell on guilt and misery. I quit such odious subjects as soon as I can, impatient to restore every body, not greatly in fault themselves, to tolerable comfort, and to have done with all the rest.

  26. Mr. Rushworth-- gets a speedy divorce from Maria; waits to marry a young woman. marriage as possession & exchange continued elsewhere The Frasers superficial party-goers, competitive on marriage market Happy Ending? No. The Grants-- moved away from Mansfield Park a stall in Westminster & residence in London Mrs. Norris subdued and goes to join Maria, the two s temperament mutual punishment for each other Maria with high spirit and strong passions for Henry, does not get to marry Henry, as the two grow to hate each other. Henry--ends up in wretchedness and self-reproach. (His desire for conquest described) Mary -- continues to live with Mrs. Grant. It takes her a long time to find a good match (definitely not a younger son; 318) * Let other pens dwell on guilt and misery. I quit such odious subjects as soon as I can, impatient to restore every body, not greatly in fault themselves, to tolerable comfort, and to have done with all the rest.

  27. Tom Mr. Yates Sir Thomas Edmund Julia Bertrams Lady Bertram (Maria) Fanny William Susan Ending in Mansfield Park: Order re-constructed

  28. Tom Maria Sir Thomas Lady Bertram Edmund Julia Bertrams Fanny William Susan (Maria) John Francis Norris (oldest.) Fanny Price Henry Admiral & wife Richard Wards + mistress Charles Mary Sam Mrs. Grant Half-sister The Frasers The Prices Betsy Ending in Mansfield Park: Insiders vs. Outsiders

  29. PLAN OF an ESTATE AT MILLBANK WESTMINSTER belonging to THE MARQUIS OF SALISBURY (source) British Library Online Gallery

  30. Book: Jane Austen: The World of Her Novels. Deirdre Le Faye. Frances Lincoln, 2002. (See Google drive) Marriage: courtship and marriage Courting and Marriage in the Regency Estate: What is a Country House? Images: Filming Locations of the Houses & Other Settings Social Background References

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