In many cases, two people experiencing similar life experiences and sharing important parallelism among their lifestyles can be thought of as a repetition of one person. In Sense and Sensibility, the two main characters Elinor and Marianne Dashwood can be seen as two extensions of the same character. These sisters are relatively young, have the same social expectations at the same time and within the family, and experience childhood and family trauma and problems apparently similar. Although they can be said to be playing the same role, these young women have different roles and responsibilities, emotional performance and surgery.
This article introduces domestic and foreign studies on rationality and emotion and then discusses the battle of Dashwood sisters according to their different personality. In addition, we will try to analyze feelings and emotions through the actual situation and the social context of writer Jane Austen. Finally, this article mainly shows how emotions conquer sensitivity. Since Austin 's nephew James E Austin' s memoir by Jane Austen Jane Austen and her novels have been widely researched and published in 1870. There are many studies on reason and emotion. For example, John Wiltshire analyzes Austin 's novel' s cultural meaning from the perspective of sex and psychology (Zhang Qun, 2008) and introduces Austin 's six novels including sensitivity and emotion. She thinks that contrast between emotion and sensitivity is integrated internally.
Many of the analyzes focus on Jane Austen's novels. When literary critics and art critics study reason and emotion, they always wonder whether emotions dominate sensibility. There is a complicated relationship between emotion and sensibility. By reading this novelist, the reader will find the sense or sensitivity of Austin on the surface. But if the reader learns more about the heroes Eleanor and Marianne, Austin tries to combine emotions and sensibilities, and the senses try to even dominate the sensibility.
In Jane Austens' novel "Sense and Sensibility" she draws sensuality and sensibility through Elinor and Marianne Dashwood. Elinor Dashwood represents that feeling. In contrast, her sister Marianne Dashwood represents sensibility. Throughout the novel, movement, thinking, and dialogue not only understands how the readers differ in their roles, but also understands how each character really reflects one of the features of the title It helps to do. "Eleanor, the advice of the eldest daughter, is very effective with a strong understanding and calm judgment, so although she is 19 years old she becomes an adviser to her mother and she often resists and all of them work for her She has a gentle heart; her temper is affectionate and emotion is strong, I know to manage them well I teach. "(Austin)