Date of Award

12-2024

Degree Type

Honors College Thesis

Academic Program

English BA

Department

English

First Advisor

Nicolle Jordan, Ph.D.

Advisor Department

English

Abstract

This thesis examines how Jane Austen uses depictions of landscapes and estates in her novel Mansfield Park to explore questions of morality, comment on society, and explore humanity's relationship with the natural world. While previous scholarship has analyzed Austen's symbolic use of places like Sotherton and Mansfield Park itself, this study provides a more comprehensive investigation by closely reading the descriptions and judgments passed on two other estates featured in the novel not analyzed by the scholarship explored. Developing a nuanced definition of "landscape,” the analysis is grounded in Austen's verbal depictions that imbue the physical settings with moral significance. The historical context of the "picturesque" aesthetic movement and ethical notions of aristocratic estate stewardship further illuminate Austen's aims. By contrasting the attitudes and actions of characters like Fanny Price, Edmund Bertram, Henry Crawford, and James Rushworth regarding the preservation or alteration of an estate’s grounds, a nuanced commentary on virtues like humility, restraint, and respect for nature arises. Crucially, the thesis argues that through her characterization, Austen endows the socially powerless Fanny Price with the greatest moral discernment and appreciation for judicious land stewardship. While male characters like Edmund and Henry evolve in their perspectives, Fanny remains the steadfast champion of preserving the estates' natural and pastoral qualities against excessive, destructive improvements. In enshrining the low-born Fanny as the arbiter of landscape ethics, Austen mounts a subversive challenge to the patriarchal privilege of aristocratic landownership. The analysis ultimately posits that the symbolic role of landscapes in Mansfield Park allow Austen to dramatize an emerging "proto-ecological consciousness" that presaged later landscaping philosophies advocating sustainable stewardship over the domination of nature. Through her deployment of intricately detailed estates and grounds, the novel portrays the moral consequences of remaking the land purely for vanity and fashion. In elevating Fanny's humble ethos of conservation, Austen crafted an enlightened voice of harmony between humanity and the natural world.

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