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Class, Conscience and The Country House: Reading Social Hierarchies in 19th-Century British Novels

Raghib Mehfuz Anu,Shahjalal Siddique Sharif

2025 · DOI: 10.47191/ijmra/v8-i05-92
International journal of multidisciplinary research and analysis · 引用数 0

摘要

This paper explores how the country house reflects and shapes class structures, moral values, and power in two major nineteenth-century British novels: Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen and Great Expectations by Charles Dickens. Using Marxist theory and Raymond Williams’ ideas from The Country and the City, the study examines how these physical spaces carry social meaning and influence characters’ lives. Pemberley and Satis House are more than settings; they serve as symbols of social rank, ideology, and emotional truth. The paper shows how characters like Elizabeth Bennet and Pip respond to the power and pressure of the country house, revealing the limits of class mobility and the deep connection between space and conscience. It also addresses how the estates reflect gender roles and inheritance laws. By studying these spaces, the paper explores how literature presents the values and problems of nineteenth-century British society. The findings suggest that the country house is a strong symbol of both social control and personal struggle, making it central to the novels’ meaning.