![]() ![]() Especially when your novel, like Austen's, was essentially about marrying off a bunch of sisters. Not only was it a big deal for women to be authors, but it was also kind of a foregone conclusion that everyone would think that their novels were automatically kind of silly and chick-lit -you know, not like man-novels, what with their deep thoughts and serious subjects. (Imagine how those people would feel about sex bloggers.) Oh, how shocking and taboo! Just one step away from prostitution! (We're not even joking about that.) Because of all that, the novel came out anonymously, as had her book Sense and Sensibility only a year earlier. When Jane Austen published Pride and Prejudicein 1813, people were still getting used to the idea that women would do something so totally immodest and exhibitionist as to actually have strangers reading something she wrote for money. ![]() ![]() Want more deets? We've also got a complete Online Course about Pride and Prejudice, with three weeks worth of readings and activities to make sure you know your stuff. ![]()
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