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In Mansfield Park, Austen was pushing her art and her ability into a new arena. She created in Fanny Price, a far more complex heroine, whose vulnerability and shyness is painfully clear and often irritating until you understand the appalling circumstances that she has been forced to live with since she was 10 years old. Living as a poor relation in a wealthy household must have been worse than being a servant and Fanny is never at ease, never among equals, always on parade and at everyone's beck and call. Only when she goes home to her natural family is she among equals only to discover that she has gotten used to a higher standard of living and that they aren't her equals any longer.
There is still a tremendous amount of toe-curling humour and wicked exasperation with the appalling Mrs. Norris. The romantic aspirations and faux pas of many of the characters is still there to entertain and exercise the mind but this time there is a deeper point being made. Austen must have been aware that the world was changing with the industrial revolution just around the corner and a faster, cruder way of life rising to the surface. Shallow, superficial ways of behaving were beginning to gain currency. The crueulty of playing with people's emotions in a dishonest and careless way is someting Austen is clearly targetting. Fanny and Edmund are flung around by this prevailing wind until they both regain their moral compasses. To some readers this is going to seem dull and pompous but if you take Fanny's state of mind as your starting point, her vulnerability and need for a safe haven you can understand their disapproval more easily.
In Mansfield Park, Austen clearly wants to show that society is on a collision course with itself if the 'anything goes' mode of living becomes the norm - a point of view that is still relevant today and that is what makes this Austen novel her most interesting and wide ranging in terms of ideas and debate about the human condition.
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