Premium Content How Poor Parenting Influenced the Bennet Sisters
By Anonymous - December 05, 2010
Featuring a wide assortment of colorful personalities, Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice contains both emotionally deep, interesting characters as well as hilarious caricatures of the bumpkins who make up the rural social scene of 18th-century England. Both types of characters are present in the Bennet family, where the two eldest daughters, Jane…
This excerpt of the essay is provided for free. To read the complete essay of 1830 words or to get access to our full library of Literature Essays, please subscribe below or log in if you are already subscribed.
Join Now - Choose a Membership Level
GradeSaver provides access to quizzes, 3077 literature essays, 906 sample college application essays and ad-free surfing in this premium content, "Members Only" section of the site! Membership includes a 10% discount on all editing orders.
We have been mentioned in the Washington Post, the Economist, and many other papers around the world for our exceptional essays. GradeSaver has reviewed each essay for quality; these essays are the very best on the Internet and many have been written by students of Ivy League colleges.
| 3-Day Trial (recurring) | $2.95 * |
| 30-Day Trial (recurring) | $6.95 * |
| 1 Month Membership (one-time charge) | $12.95 |
| 12 Month Membership (one-time charge) | $49.95 |
* After your trial period, you will be billed a monthly fee of $6.95 with the option to cancel at any time. Questions? Read our FAQ.
Existing Users
Pride and Prejudice Essays and Related Content
- Pride and Prejudice: Study Guide
- Pride and Prejudice: Major Themes
- Pride and Prejudice: E-Text
- Pride and Prejudice: Questions
- Pride and Prejudice: Purchase the Novel and Related Material
- Jane Austen: Biography
- Theme of Pride
- Epistolary Study of Austen
- Money as Social Currency in the Society Described in Pride and Prejudice
- Discretion and Design in Pride and Prejudice
- Eloquence: The Window To the Soul and the Number One Requirement for a Successful Courtship
- The Good, the Bad, and the Perfect
- Love and Marriage in Pride and Prejudice
- Class and Status in Pride and Prejudice
- A Sense of Place in Austen's Pride and Prejudice
- Elizabeth's Search For a Hero
- Men, Women, and the Willful Misinterpretation of Female Speech
- Moral Hierarchy: Society and Love in Austen's Pride and Prejudice
- Misreading of Wickham: Elizabeth's Preoccupation with Darcy
- A Remedy to Prejudice: Role Models at Home
- The Community Made Me Do It
- The Tao of Austen: The Philosophy of Concordia Discors in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice
- The Role of Balls and Gossip in 18th Century England
- The Power of Seventeen Letters
- The Influence of Society
- Mind over Matter in Pride and Prejudice
- Pride and Prejudice-Dowries and Marriage in 19th-Century England
- From Contempt to Love: Elizabeth and Darcy’s Evolution
- The Theatre in Society
- Elizabeth Loves Power, Not Populism
- The Prejudice of Perspective
- Money and Social Class in Great Expectations and Pride and Predjudice
- Walks: The Path of Elizabeth and Darcy's Relationship
- Humor and Insensitivity: Austen's Creation of Mr. Bennet
- How Poor Parenting Influenced the Bennet Sisters




