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      • A most unpleasant woman, Fanny represents the spoiled and selfish woman of wealth of Austen's time. She is egoistic and believes that what is good for her or her child is the best thing for everyone.
      www.cliffsnotes.com/literature/s/sense-and-sensibility/character-analysis/fanny-dashwood
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Fanny_PriceFanny Price - Wikipedia

    Fanny (like Austen) favours the poet William Cowper, who was a passionate abolitionist and often wrote poems on the subject.

  3. Fanny Price, fictional character, a poor relation of timid disposition but strong principles who goes to live with the family of Sir Thomas and Lady Bertram, her wealthy uncle and aunt, in Jane Austen’s novel Mansfield Park (1814). Fanny is befriended by her cousin Edmund, who becomes a clergyman.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. A most unpleasant woman, Fanny represents the spoiled and selfish woman of wealth of Austen's time. She is egoistic and believes that what is good for her or her child is the best thing for everyone.

  5. Aug 20, 2020 · The pantheon of Jane Austen heroines is populated with many intelligent, strong, and independent women. Elizabeth Bennet is beloved for her sparkling wit; Emma Woodhouse, for her generous heart; and Fanny Price . . . well, the heroine of Mansfield Park can be a little harder to like. She’s painfully shy and just so . . . good all the time.

  6. Fanny is a physically delicate, uptight, morally righteous, and easily-upset girl and later young woman, the niece of Sir Thomas and Lady Bertram and the cousin and later wife of Edmund. Fanny moves to Mansfield Park as a child in order to relieve her impoverished mother of a financial burden.

  7. The novel tells the story of Fanny Price, starting when her overburdened family sends her at the age of ten to live in the household of her wealthy aunt and uncle and following her development into early adulthood.

  8. Mar 18, 2016 · Fanny’s goodness renders her the least intrinsically likeable of Austen’s heroines—she makes none of the mistakes that endear the other heroines to us—but it also makes her, in my opinion, the most admirable. Here are some reasons you should admire her, too (and read Mansfield Park in the first place): She’s incredibly constant.