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Pride and Prejudice Quotes only (x Tahnee Dwyer)

Pride and Prejudice Quotes only (x Tahnee Dwyer)

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đŸ„łđŸ‘ Smart move! The VCE English Exam and your school SAC (School Assessed Coursework) require you to have and explain key quotes from your text. Lucky you've got BEAR Quotes Daily Analysis in your study kit 🚀

 

👀đŸ“ș WATCH some of our short quote explanations on YouTube here.

 

What you're getting

 

BEAR Quotes (Quotes only) for Pride and Prejudice (Jane Austen, published by Penguin, 2003) - co-authored with Victorian teacher, Tahnee Dwyer

 

One (1) quote* will be sent to your email address daily for at least fifty (50) consecutive days. 

 

*On some days, the ‘quote’ may refer to a form of metalanguage. This means that in addition to literal quotes from the text, this metalanguage or film technique is important to include in essay writing.

 

Unlock detailed analysis for each quote by purchasing the full BEAR Quotes here. BEAR Quotes Daily Analysis is much more than the ordinary study guide.

 

🙋 WANT the Quotes ALL AT ONCE in a digital repository? Add this to your cart!

 

 

Text summary from the 2022 VCAA Text List

 

First published in 1813 and originally titled ‘First Impressions’, Pride and Prejudice follows the setting up and unravelling of misunderstandings between the spirited Elizabeth Bennet and the wealthy Fitzwilliam Darcy. The introduction of siblings, cousins and suitors complicates the plot and deepens Elizabeth’s awareness of herself. The text follows the ways in which characters respond to the attentions of others.

 

 

Replete with irony and free indirect discourse, Pride and Prejudice is an extended meditation on the extent to which one must know oneself before they can truly know another. It also provides insight into the obsessions of Georgian England: marriage, rank and etiquette. While Austen’s original readers would undoubtedly have appreciated the twists and turns of the marriage plot, modern audiences will appreciate the way in which Elizabeth and her four sisters navigate expectations imposed by self and society, as well as the notion of an ‘accomplished woman’.

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