Fanny Price is the New Pink

I saw a comment about Fanny that floored me because it made so much sense. On a thread about polarizing characters, User appletreerose said, “with Austen’s male characters, she often opposes a charming louse with a good man who doesn’t easily catch the eye. I think Mansfield Park is the only time she does this with the women. Fanny Price has a lot in common with Edward Ferrars…unassuming and tending to put others first, but totally indomitable on matters of principle.”

I have to admit, I am one of those that struggles to see Fanny’s appeal when I’m reading Mansfield Park. She has some great moments… but that book is not one I pick up often like Persuasion or Emma. Part of the blame might lie with Edmund who I also like but don’t have strong feelings for Either way, my feelings about Mansfield Park are a bit lackluster given my rabid love of most things Jane Austen.

This idea though, that Fanny is the less-flashy, real-substance love interest being contrasted with Mary Crawford’s superficiality struck me over the top of the head (even though it is very obvious, and I myself have contrasted them at times.)

It is a trope I love when it is applied to the hero. Mr. Darcy contrasted with Lieutenant Wickham, Mr. Knightley contrasted with Frank Churchill, Colonel Brandon contrasted with Willoughby, etc. I can eat some of that ice cream any day of the week, you know?

So, how did I not apply it to Fanny? I suspect there’s some cultural gender bias at play, in that I demand lively and charming qualities from a woman in a way that I don’t from a man. But, I don’t think that’s the main reason.

In a way, Mansfield Park is entirely flipped from Pride and Prejudice or Emma. Instead of a man realizing that he is in love with a woman and us waiting until she realizes she loves him, we have the opposite. Fanny knows she is in love with Edmund and we must wait for him to realize that he loves her. That makes Edmund take the usual spot of the “heroine” in our journey. He is the one who is faced with several choices and must choose substance over charm. Looking at Fanny like that, I suddenly like her a thousand times more.

I suppose I’ve only focused on the other comparison between Edmund and Henry Crawford, which never gripped me. We never really think Fanny will go for Crawford, so there is no drama or angst over that part–at least not for me. But with Edmund and Mary… Yikes, that boy is ready to propose! If I look at the romance quadrangle as Edmund’s story, it makes more sense to me.

It also explains the ending. It always felt so strange and incomplete that Fanny and Edmund’s romance is relegated to barely a paragraph at the end. (Honestly, it still does; I’m a little bitter!) But it makes a smidge more sense if I see it as Edmund’s story.

Now, my brain immediately pokes me and says, “You’ve pointed out the same progression as Persuasion! What’s the big deal? Anne loves Captain Wentworth and we have to wait for him to realize he loves her, too. Same!” Somehow though, Persuasion feels far more Anne’s story than Wentworth’s. Perhaps it’s because she gets to take some vital steps to show her confidence, maturity, and interest in him. Perhaps we just get more internality and are more “in her head” than we are with Fanny.

Because Edmund is so talkative with Fanny, we actually get more of his internality in Mansfield Park. Or at least an argument could be made in that direction.

Anyway, I wanted to share my (probably obvious) realization with you all before I go re-read Mansfield Park with Edmund as the heroine. 🙂 Wish me luck!

Corrie

P.S. I have published my Highbury Variation as a digital boxset! Check it out if you haven’t gotten to read them yet.

8 responses to “Fanny Price is the New Pink”

  1. Alice McVeigh Avatar

    Absolutely!!!!

    1. Corrie Garrett Avatar
      Corrie Garrett

      Thanks! 😊

  2. Riana Everly Avatar

    I think my tepid response to MP isn’t that Fanny isn’t a good person worthy of her HEA. She’s probably exactly the sort of person we’d like as a friend. But for me, she’s not the literary heroine who captures my interest. We want different things when we read than in real life. Darcy is a terrific page-hero, for example, but IRL I’ll take Henry Tilney or Sir John Middleton, someone who can make me laugh.

    1. Corrie Garrett Avatar
      Corrie Garrett

      That’s an excellent point. Often we want vastly different things in literature than real life. My teenage obsession with vampires and werewolves and my very kind and helpful husband can attest to that! 😂

  3. Michelle H Avatar
    Michelle H

    I am rereading MP this year with my local JASNA. I (am an introvert and shy with groups of people,) screwed up my courage and attended a meeting for the first time a few months ago. Guess what? We are reading Mansfield Park this year. An entire year devoted to reading the last book I’d choose to devote any more time than it took me to listen to the audio version, and that’s a stretch. For me, it’s like watching a train wreck happening in slow motion. It’s my least favorite Austen, can you tell? But I’m rereading it and enjoying the discussions, and the insight, especially from the ladies who organize and preside over the meetings. Of all years for me to decide to join. I’m using David Shaphard’s annotated edition, which was literally gathering dust on my Austen shelves, and that’s a good thing.

    I’m still frustrated with Edmund, but love his long standing care of Fanny.
    I still loathe Mrs. Norris with a profound intensity….I understand we are supposed to hate her treatment of Fanny, she’s there for a reason. I’d like to know who Jane modeled her after?? Does anybody know?
    I still feel sorry…ever more so whenever I reread or watch a movie…for Mr. Rushworth. Is he really all that deserving of the Maria’s betrayal? Just because he’s silly? And has more money than brains?
    I see Mary more as desperate now than just wicked. But she is wicked. And don’t get me started on her brother!
    And I am appreciating Fanny more than ever because she sticks to her own moral compass, she remains true to herself. That has always been there, but I’m getting more comfortable with it as being enough. I’ve seen her as just a doormat, and she has her doormat moments. Edmund’s seeing her finally in the end of MP is anticlimactic. I’m happy for Fanny and I believe they will be happy. And I too wish we could see more of that happily ever after from the story. But Austen never gives us that. Thank goodness for fan fiction. So thank you dear JAFF writers!

    1. Corrie Garrett Avatar
      Corrie Garrett

      Yes, I heartily second your feelings about MP, and that is hilarious (in a kind of terrible way) that you ended up with it for a year with your first JASNA group! 😆
      You are so funny writing about it, but it sounds like you have had a great attitude about getting what you can out of the year.
      And yes, poor Mr. Rushworth! He is so empty-headed and he is punished so severely! I feel like maybe JA was so sick of stupid men (maybe a particular one or two) that she decided to work out her feelings in the novel. A sort of similar thing seems to be set up in lady Susan, as far as the dunce of a man ending up with a woman who won’t be faithful…!
      Anyway, it’s always fascinating to hear where others find their enjoyment in Austen’s books, thanks for sharing! 🥰

  4. Anya Avatar

    I thoroughly enjoyed the Highbury Variation! If there had been no Darcy or Emma, I think Lizzy and Mr. Knightley would have been quite happy together. And the Gardiner children were very entertaining.

  5. Corrie Garrett Avatar
    Corrie Garrett

    Oh, thank you for letting me know you enjoyed it! Yes, without Emma or Mr. Darcy, I could definitely see a friends-to-lovers story with Mr. Knightley and Lizzy. I would totally read that. ☺️
    And thanks for your comments about the Gardiner children—I rather fell in love with them myself! If I ever decide to extend that series maybe I’ll start with the Gardiner girls.
    Thanks again!
    Corrie

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