Hasty Briefsbeta

Jane Austen was a satirist – why isn't she treated like one?

12 days ago
  • #Satire
  • #Women Writers
  • #Jane Austen
  • Jane Austen's works are filled with gentle satire and irony, targeting characters like Sir Walter Elliot and Isabella.
  • Women writers like Austen, Frances Burney, and Eliza Haywood are often excluded from histories of satire despite their satirical works.
  • Satire is traditionally defined as attacking vice or folly with wit, but this definition is often coded in masculine language.
  • Austen and other women writers used satire to critique patriarchal society and challenge assumptions about women's roles.
  • Examples of women's satire include Jane Collier's 'The Art of Ingeniously Tormenting' and Eliza Haywood's 'The Parrot'.
  • Charlotte Brontë also employed satire, dedicating 'Jane Eyre' to Thackeray's 'Vanity Fair'.
  • Women's satire often uses subtle critique rather than violent attacks, as seen in Austen's characters like Elizabeth Bennet.
  • Virginia Woolf noted Austen's laughter at the world, highlighting the subtlety of her satire.