Marriage and Social Customs
Foils and Characterization
Structure and Plot Development
Key Moments and Character Development
100

This is described as "the business of [Mrs. Bennet's] life."

What is seeing her daughters married?

100

This character's warmth and openness initially highlight Mr. Darcy's reserve.

Who is Mr. Bingley?

100

Volume 1 ends with this event, subverting expectations and setting the terms by which our heroine will find a happy ending.

What is an engagement?

100

Elizabeth's initial reaction to Mr. Darcy can be best described as this emotional progression.

What is anger to self-awareness and repentance?

200

This is the primary reason it is important for the Bennet sisters to marry.

What is financial security and social status?

200

This character's goodness serves as a foil to Elizabeth's cynicism.

Who is Jane?

200

Elizabeth's visiting Jane on her way to Hunsford structurally contrasts Jane's disappointment in love with this event.

What is Charlotte's marriage?

200

Pemberley reflects Darcy's character by demonstrating this quality.

What is taste, refinement, and balance as opposed to ostentation?

300

Charlotte Lucas's marriage to Mr. Collins reflects this view of marriage.

What is a practical view, that economic security is more important than romantic fulfillment?

300

This character's vanity and obsequiousness satirizes an overdrawn attention to wealth, social status, and appearances of morality.

Who is Mr. Collins?

300

Elizabeth's warning to her father about Lydia going to Brighton serves this narrative purpose.

What is foreshadowing future scandal?

300

Darcy's first proposal is inconsistent with his character as established because it reveals this quality.

What is an inability to control his emotions?

400

Elizabeth rejects this view of marriage, prioritizing this instead.

What is a practical view of marriage, instead prioritizing respect, compatibility, and mutual affection?

400

This character serves as a foil to Mr. Darcy, emphasizing his discomfort in conversing with strangers.

Who is Col. Fitzwilliam?

400

Darcy's letter serves this purpose in Elizabeth's characterization.

What is a moment of self-reflection and a shift in perspective?

400
Elizabeth's interactions with Lady Catherine reveal her value of this trait.

What is character over wealth and status?

500

This character has no economic need to marry, in contrast to the novel's heroines.

Who is Lady Catherine/her daughter?

500

Darcy's first proposal emphasizes these previously established character traits.

What is pride in his social status?

500

Bingley's return to Netherfield at the end mirrors the beginning in order to emphasize this idea.

What is the progression of resolution through marriage?

500

Lydia's behavior threatens the Bennet family by endangering this.

What is their reputation/marriage prospects?

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