Emma also turned into an appropriate woman by correcting her first negligence. Trollope said: "In all the paragraphs of the book she is foolish, somewhat vanity, somewhat ignorant, or even mean scornful mistake" (7) 19. As she did not know anything about her neighbors, Emma interfered with their lives in a way that made them unhappy, because "she is often faulty" (Austin 359). At the beginning of the novel, Mr. Knightley predicted the outcome of the Emma plan, "You are more likely to hurt yourself than to obstruct them" (Austin 8) 21 and "Working in a weak heart is different It will produce. " Mischief "(Aus
Emma and Clueless are two movies about Jane Austen's novel Emma. These stories explain the importance of self-development and personal growth through the use of social status and moral values. Given their similar situation, the hero Emma and Cher will transform from a young adult into a mature and emotionally mature woman. Emma and Cher are young women with wealthy, advanced social and cultural elites. Money is synonymous with power and high social status, so money is important to both societies. Because of their wealth, the protagonists are useless, and they contain a sense of vanity, arrogance and social superiority. Emma and Cher are said to be "perfect miniatures" of their time frame and environment.
Clueless (1995), supervised by Amy Heckerling, reorganized Jane Austen 's 1815 novel Emma into the context of contemporary society and explored the transformation of each of the main characters, Cher and Emma. Both texts are sarcastic, but through the outlines of the main themes, gender, class, social structure of the time, regency of the UK, and Postmodern America. Although attitudes towards society are similar, changes in the classless structure and women's freedom in Cueless' s background attitudes and values highlight the big differences between the present society and the UK in the 19th century.
Although they may have been around 200 years ago, Clueless of Amy Heckerling and Emma of Austen have explored the theme of marriage, social class, feminism. Amy · Heckling changed and ignored many values and views of Austin's 1816 Novel Emma. The transformation of the novel makes it possible for new ideas to emerge as a result of changes in values over the past several centuries. As a result of comparing the two texts, many of the themes and values that appeared in the Romantic era changed to adapt to the social discourse of the 1990s - the Hecklin era. Contrastive ideas and ideas are described and affected by the context in which each text is contained