Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice shows some of the plights of women in a similar yet different approach to other writers. For example, she shares the similarity with Wollstonecraft and Woolf in displaying that women were often marrying for security. This is evident in Mr. Collin’s proposal when he says, “I am persuaded that when sanctioned by the express authority of both your excellent parents, my proposals will not fail at being acceptable.” This displays how parents wanted their children and …show more content…
Like Austen she writes about how women often felt the need to marry for security in A Vindication. She says, “Strength of body and mind are sacrificed to...the desire of establishing themselves--the only way women can rise in the world,--by marriage.” This displays how many women saw marriage as more important than almost anything else because it was the most common and effective way to survive at the time. Wollstonecraft is also like Austen and Woolf in her observation that men’s virtuous behavior can help women be more virtuous and wise. She writes, “Let men become more chaste, and if women do not grow wiser in the same ratio, it will be clear that they have weaker understandings.” This highlights how men’s behavior towards women, especially in respect to them treating them with dignity and allowing them to learn allows women to flourish. Along with talking about good characteristics, Wollstonecraft displays a difference in the other two writers when she speaks about how women can sometimes believe that certain immature behaviors are better than behaving with dignity. Wollstonecraft shows how women were treated in A