The text is rooted in the world that supports the lives of leisure, sociability, and courtship that preoccupy the Bennets of Pride and Prejudice. In Longbourn, the Bennets play supporting roles, and the novel examines the relationships between employer and employed to expose the hierarchies of and assumptions around the British class system. The Bennets belong to the gentry, a nebulously defined class that lay between the upper class with its titles and peerages and the middle class, which drew income from business ventures; the definition of a gentleman was that he lived off incomes from the land he owned and did not need to work. The servantry, as Jo Baker shows, had its own hierarchies of power and divisions of labor, which reflected and commented on those above them in status.
Baker depicts the gentry class maintaining its sense of superiority by viewing the classes below them as inferior persons and refusing to afford them full dimensionality as human beings. Polly is not even allowed to use her name, Mary, because one of the Bennet daughters is so named; her employers simply overwrite her identity and give her a new name that suits them. Mrs. Hill is considered a suitable sexual partner by Mr.
Beauty
View Collection
Books & Literature
View Collection
Books that Feature the Theme of...
View Collection
British Literature
View Collection
Class
View Collection
Class
View Collection
Community
View Collection
Equality
View Collection
Family
View Collection
Fathers
View Collection
Marriage
View Collection
Mothers
View Collection
Pride Month Reads
View Collection
Romance
View Collection
The Best of "Best Book" Lists
View Collection
The Future
View Collection
Valentine's Day Reads: The Theme of Love
View Collection