I agree with everything you say there Lioness.
Also, good discussion here on this thread.
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but she wasnt meant to be likable... The ones Ive read the most being P&P E, P, and MP Emma is perhaps my least favorite... and Mansfield park was always my post favourite but I think maybe this changes with time and maybe when I reread all her novels again ( and Love and freindship((her spelling )) for the first time) this summer my favourite might change.
I was 16 when i read Emma,(24 now) but i dont think maturity has anything to do with my not liking it, and as for giving it another try i did last year and my views are still basicly the same. :)
Where Northanger Abbey has grown on me, My opinion of Emma has only changed in one aspect, and thats is that i'd love to know that story form Jane Fairfax's perspective.Quote:
Originally Posted by niamh
Like Lioness heart, i too could not empitise with her character; her snobbishness, over-aultered state of importance, her impoper interference in the lives of those around her and her rudeness to those if lower standing just didnt bode well with me and meant that from chapter one it wasnt going to be love for me.:bawling: :)
Nightshade, i am also like that. books becoming more or less a favourite everytime you read them. But persuasion has always been my favourite. Its always Pride and Prejudice and mansfield Park that fight for the next slot!:D
Ah! But how many do? :-)
Are we not all having opinions on myriad of things in our own life without ever actually checking the facts? :-)
But I take your point.
But we are all capable of being judgemental. But Emma with her intellect and accompolishments is in a position to be judgemental :-)Quote:
and her shallowness is mainly with regard to how judgemental she could be, like with her trying to persuade Harriet not to marry that farmer guy (i've forgotten his name).
But again I take your point :-)
Regards,
Lote
I agree with you on this one. Despite all the other faults in Emma, the one that really irritates is her selfishness; how she selfishly uses Harriet and then dispenses with her finally. Harriet's character shows much more steadiness in friendship and righteousness than Emma could ever aspire for.
Even minor characters such as Mrs. Elton come through as more humane, i.e., her attempts at helping Jane Fairfax are honest though showy. Emma continuously aspires to do good by the less fortunate, all the while doing exactly the opposite, and the worst of the lot is her ill use of Harriet towards the final chapters.
the Eltons' attempt to help Jane Fairfax is obviously a plan to make Emma's life less "handsome"; a possible vengeance after Emma's dumping of Mr. Elton. Their immediate admiration of Jane Fairfax is questionable, at Mrs Elton's case: weird and obssesive. Both Emma and Mrs Elton are snobs, both think they are the bell of Highbury, but better readers can detect the root of their actions and motives. Emma the novel, for me, is a study of the different levels of snobbery; those who are born with an ingrained knowledge of high importance (spoilt brats) who in spite of their good intentions make hazards after hazards, and those who, like the Eltons, are merely social climbers, base and false.
Emma is not a very likable person, but I had a feeling that there was something good at her core, even when she was in the deepest depths of her blinding selfishness. I think her transformation makes her into a much more likable person, and brings out her good qualities, even though it is sad that she has to love a man in order to do so. I think that bit might have just been a sign of the times though.
As this book nears its 200 year mark, I think it holds up well and is a fascinating character study. I read everyday and do not care how long a book is as long as I learn something new about people and history.The payoff is not always how a book ends but the getting there. It is sort of like the saying "Stop and smell the roses".
hm.. I'm not sure she's all that intellectual. I must admit I've only read 50 pages so far... in one place it says that age 7 she was able to understand ideas her older sister didn't understand, but there is no concrete example (like there often aren't any concrete examples or details in Austen's books). so we just have to take the narrator's word for it. but on the other hand, the same narrator tells + Mrs Weston tell us that Emma is lazy and pretends to be more accomplished than she really is.
as for "pretty".. well, she seems to have "the true hazel eye", regular features and good teeth. so yeah, she's pretty, but not stunningly beautiful. plus, being pretty or (born) wealthy are a matter of accident, they aren't really characteristics that recommend her to me.
all in all, I think what makes this book difficult to read is that you can't relate to the main character (as several posters said). I'll try to finish the book anyway and I'm actually enjoying it (more or less), but it requires a kind of distance and sophistication which I normally don't find easy to muster while reading a book.
Personally, I read all books the same way, whether they are "literature" or "pulp/entertainment/..". Even though "literature" books are harder to read, I normally don't find it hard to relate to the characters. On the other hand, I can relate to e.g. Hannibal Lecter just as easily, although he's a cannibal and murderer. I still find him more likable than Emma :blush:
yes i with you in your opinion it is very boring character.i felt i'm dying to finish the first 50 pages
i have only just read emma, my sister has only just bought it down from melbourne for me[as i am to chespo to buy it] and i loved emma, the person. i love the movies too. but i think that mr knightley is the most sweetest person ever. mr darcy has nothing on mr knightley! i love it all and have read twice in one week. i think she is a little bit selfish at times, but i forgive those faults of hers because she is amazing!
It was the first novel I read by Austen. Although I got angry because of the way Emma treats other people especially Harriet, interfering with others affairs, and trying to be a kind of matchmaker, I like the character; but I prefer persuation. I don't know what will be my opinion if i re-read them again.