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submitted 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I figured it could be fun to do small discussion each time I finish an (interesting) book, since I always have so many thoughts but no book club to discuss them with.

I completed Jane Austen's Pride & Prejudice last night, and I have to say I really enjoyed the book. I found it had a great amount of drama and intrigue to keep me reading on, even after my usual bedtime. But more significantly, I found the insight into 1800's English culture to be supremely interesting.

I was continually dazzled by the changes in English, and how we've modified the language as the years have progressed. For example, for someone to "condescend" in those days wasn't (in my interpretation) necessarily something rude, as it would be these days. It was seen as someone of higher station being humble enough to interact with and advise people who would generally be considered "beneath" them. For example, Lady Catherine is often described as condescending to Mr. Collins, which he takes great pleasure in.

This was also one of the first times I found an enjoyable use-case for LLMs, namely ChatGPT. I found it very helpful to be able to ask questions about the time period and its relation to the book and get specific, well thought out answers without spending too much time searching for reputable sites and scanning through potential sources for answers. That's time that I wanted to be reading, not researching. For example, I was curious how the "ten thousand a year" income was scaled, and how that worked out to today's dollars and how that income was generated. I also was able to ask questions like why Elizabeth might have been embarrassed at a certain scene, or why Mr. Collins was considered so "uncool" by everyone. In fact, a lot of my questions revolved around Mr. Collins and what he was specifically doing to be considered a social pariah by some. Admittedly, I could have had the same experience (potentially) using an annotated book, which I did want to do at some point, but I didn't find the time to get to the library to find a copy, and ChatGPT was conveniently in my pocket at any time. I generally consider myself largely anti-"AI hype" - but I'd be foolish not to admit that this is one of those use-cases that it really shines.

Overall, I really enjoyed the book. I'd probably give it a five out of five, meaning that I will probably re-read it someday in the future.

Love to hear others thoughts:

  • When did you last read it?
  • Did you enjoy it?
  • Would you read it again?
  • Did anything about the book stick with you in particular?
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[-] [email protected] 5 points 2 days ago

I haven't read that book since high school, but your post caught my eye because I'm reading Thomas Piketty 'Capital in the Twenty-First Century' and he keeps referencing Jane Austen and her stories' characters incomes and how the 'elite' classes methods of accumulating and maintaining wealth has altered since the times of Austen. Specifically, he remarks on how inflation wasn't occurring back then and hadn't for a long period of time, so using exact money amounts like "10k/yr" contained a lot of connotated information for contemporary readers, but it requires us modern folk to do conversions and such to begin to understand. Hope others engage with the post and i like your idea of the discussions - I think I could give P&P a read after I finish this super-dense non-fiction by Piketty :)

[-] [email protected] 2 points 2 days ago

It's definitely bizarre, because nobody in the story actually "works" besides the local militia and servants, yet everyone has money and is rich

It appears to be because you get a lump sum at some point (inheritance, dowry, whatever) then "invest" it and get interest payments. Or, in the case of Mr. Bennet, they have land that they pay others to work or lease out to farmers. Just really fascinating how hand-wavey the money is, it just "is" for the most part and you don't explain how or why you are rich

this post was submitted on 28 May 2025
17 points (94.7% liked)

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