June 2022

VOlUME 05 ISSUE 06 JUNE 2022
Becky Sharp’s Commodified Interpersonal Relationships in Vanity Fair
1Ying Yang, 2Jingdong Zhong
1,2School of English, Zhejiang Yuexiu University, Shaoxing, China
DOI : https://doi.org/10.47191/ijsshr/v5-i6-47

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ABSTRACT:

Vanity Fair is a masterpiece by William Makepeace Thackeray (1811-1863), which is centered on the lives of two young women, Becky Sharp and Amelia Sedley, presenting the life of extravagance and rivalry of the aristocratic bourgeoisie in nineteenth-century England. In the novel, Thackeray ruthlessly exposes the shameless and degenerate nature of the feudal aristocracy and the hypocrisy of the bourgeoisie in their pursuit of fame and fortune. During the Victorian period, consumerism prevailed. The circulation of commodities was well developed, and people at that time indulged in the revelry of the material world. As long as capital exists, commodities are bound to be an eternal element in the development of human society. This paper focuses on the female protagonist Becky in Vanity Fair by adopting the methods of literature research and textual analysis, revealing Thackeray’s portrayal of commodified interpersonal relationships in the novelas well as the karmic consequences of such aberrant relationships in order to warn contemporary people on the Fair.

KEYWORDS:

Vanity Fair, Thackeray, Becky Sharp, Victorian, commodified interpersonal relationship.

REFERENCES

1) Langland, E. (1992). Nobody’s angels: Domestic ideology and middle-class women in the victorian novel. PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America, 107(2), 290–304.

2) Chang, Y. J. (2021). An analysis of Becky Sharp’s character in Vanity Fair. Literature Education (1st Half), (3),65–67.

3) Miller, A. H. (1995). Novels behind glass. Cambridge University Press.

4) Mingay, G. E. (2013). English landed society in the eighteenth century. Routledge.

5) Thackeray, W.P. (2003). Vanity Fair. Penguin Classics.

6) Wang, H. T. (2020). On the British class mobility in the 18th and 19th centuries: A case study of Pride and Prejudice. Young writer, (8), 125-129.

7) Zhang, J. (2016). The representation of the commoditized family relationships in Vanity Fair. Guangdong University of Foreign Studies.

VOlUME 05 ISSUE 06 JUNE 2022

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