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December 2, 2024
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| By Louise Loftus Senior Staff Editor |
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I want to talk about one of my oldest vices: Georgian England.
A very specific slice of Georgian England, to be clear. When the news, work or life is hard, I return to a Jane Austen novel or dramatization and relax almost immediately. I don't know if it's the thought of living in a time before smartphones, microplastics and nuclear weapons, but the effect is almost soporific.
In particular, I reread and rewatch the 1995 BBC version of "Pride and Prejudice" a lot. Naturally, each time I identify with the force that is Lizzy Bennet, who always knows what she wants to say — invariably something very witty — and isn't afraid to say it.
But Paula Byrne, an Austen biographer, has flipped my read of the novel upside down in a new guest essay. There has been a spate of reimaginings of the plain, bookish and earnest Mary Bennet — the latest of which is a planned adaptation by the BBC — and Byrne argues that Mary deserves this renewed attention.
"Mary is vain, but flails in her efforts at self improvement," Byrne writes. "She is judgmental of those around her whom we suspect she secretly envies. She desperately wants to say the smart thing, but can't think of it in time. She repeats opinions she's read as her own."
"She is all of us," Byrne writes, and merits a sympathetic reading — one that the modern reader can give her. The next time I revisit "P&P," it will be with renewed attention to the overlooked middle sister.
Read the essay:
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| Photo Illustration by The New York Times. Photo: Focus Films, Via Everett Collection |
Guest Essay Mary Is the Bennet Sister We NeedJane Austen, one of the most beloved novelists in the English language, must have had some sympathy for a girl who liked a good book. By Paula Byrne |
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