As some of you might know,
silburygirl is a serious Austen scholar; she's doing a paper on Mansfield Park and urged me to reread it when I told her it was the one Austen novel I loathed and gave me instructions on what to look for. I did and posted a review on LibraryThing and Goodreads. Sil urged me to post the review on LJ, because she wants to see what
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Comments 57
Considering I'm writing a thesis on this novel, I could ramble on forever and ever in response to this. I will try to be succinct, though!
For me, the most unsettling part of the last chapter (and the entire novel, really) are Sir Thomas's musings about child-rearing, and his sense that he deserves the comfort that Fanny brings him. Given that most of the book is devoted to Fanny's unhappiness, it seems too dismissive to be sanctioned by the narrator.
You mentioned the issue of slavery at one point... I can direct you to some decent articles on the subject, if you like. There's a lot (and a lot of it is useless, which led to me spending a lot of last summer experiencing serious RAGE at the lack of critical ingenuity in the world), but the obvious place to start is Said's chapter on MP in Culture and Imperialism, which is a poorly argued but nevertheless necessary piece of writing ( ... )
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Well, I don't know that we can call you a pro yet (well have to wait to you publish! And teach classes on it!) but compared to those of us who gush about Colin Firth in a wet shirt?
For me, the most unsettling part of the last chapter (and the entire novel, really) are Sir Thomas's musings about child-rearing, and his sense that he deserves the comfort that Fanny brings him.Huh. I'll have to reread that part then, that aspect went past me. What I got out of it was more the regret over how he reared his own daughters, in particular how being harsh with them caused him to lose their confidence. But then maybe that was more Austen's take? It can be hard at time separating a character's musings from the narrators. Which is a problem with Fanny a lot I think. First time I thought we were supposed to dislike Mary Crawford--full stop. Now I'm not so sure, because I was more aware this ( ... )
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However, I have found some fanfiction that makes me think of the story in a kinder light in the end...
A Stitch in Time : An alternate ending to the story, as seen through Edmund’s eyes.
http://archiveofourown.org/collections/yuletide2010/works/141634
Not What Was Expected
A similar alternate ending, as seen through Fanny’s eyes.
http://archiveofourown.org/collections/yuletide2010/works/140972
Happy reading. :)
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The first time Edmund sees the new Mrs Henry Crawford, it comes as quite a shock. Her hair has been cut and fashionably dressed and her clothes are quietly expensive and in a style and colour that suit her. There’s colour in her cheeks and her eyes are bright and active. The really alarming thing is that now he’s seen her like this he can’t remember how she used to look: the old Fanny fades like a ghost, merging with the fall of a curtain or the pattern of the wallpaper.
When I said MP tempts me to fanfic, I mean things like this--ones that flesh out the might-have-beens. Because I do get what you mean about Fanny--she does seem so passive and inert. Second time around I was more aware though of how her circumstances constrain her so much--and silburygirl pointed me to her bitterness--and seeing it on reread it made her more interesting. She's not this too good to be true sweet thing. But I admit there were ( ... )
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On another note, I remember seeing a TV version of Mansfield Park where Billie Piper(!) from Dr Who was Fanny. She did her best, but I think it was a bad case of Casting Fail.
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On another note, I remember seeing a TV version of Mansfield Park where Billie Piper(!) from Dr Who was Fanny. She did her best, but I think it was a bad case of Casting Fail.
Had to be better than the feature film. That one badly mangled Fanny's character I'm afraid.
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Silburygirl also thinks that there's reason especially in that last chapter to think Austen deliberately was trying to create a sense of dissatisfaction in the reader--with Fanny's Mrs Norris-like satisfaction in others' sorrow and it making her useful, in giving short shrift to Fanny and Edmund's courtship, with Sir Thomas'self-satisfaction, and with the extended section bring to mind the what-if of Fanny and Crawford.
Well, of course a lack of satisfaction is exactly what is grist for the fanfic mill! I'm happy your enjoying the fanfic!
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You just have to go into Mansfield Park with a different mindset. It's not a romance -- it's a critique and if you do, it's much easier to appreciate. That doesn't mean you're ever going to enjoy it as much (because I still love other Austen novels more) but it does make it easier to read.
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I think she does have a personality though--but it's an unlikable one--but I agree with you its in the service of social criticism. On reread I came to see Fanny as a damaged character. Edmund is the only one who cares about her, so she models herself after him, and he obviously finds pride in that, in shaping her. And she has the horror of being noticed Mary Crawford notices, because all the attention she gets is negative attention. She's constantly told she doesn't matter, that she's inferior, and so she wants to disappear. And when Henry Crawford continues to pursue her, expecting her to be flattered by the challenge, the narrator notes that given the constant opposition Fanny deals with, she finds no charm in challenge. IOWs, yes, she's passive, meek, quiet--because the social structure she's been reared in shapes her that way.
You just have to go into Mansfield Park ( ... )
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But you know, of all her novels, it's the one that most made me think and I find I could discuss endlessly. Much more than say my favorite Persuasion where you'd have to get me to stop sighing over Captain Wentworth's letter first!
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