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  1. Characters in the Novel. Jane Austen ‘s Sense and sensibility has very interesting characters. Elinor Sensible/rational/prudent – she doesn’t allow her thinking to be clouded by her emotions. Understanding – she understood that Edward was naive by falling in love with her while still engaged to Lucy. Marianne

  2. Mrs. Dashwood. Mrs. Dashwood, the stepmother of John and mother of Elinor and Marianne. She is a warmhearted, impulsive woman, not endowed with much practical sense. Mrs. Ferrars. Mrs. Ferrars ...

  3. Miss Steele is a harmless creature who somehow manages to do a lot of harm, if that makes sense. Sure, she's silly and annoying, but, like many of the characters here, she's not bad at heart. What...

  4. The earliest of her novels, Sense and Sensibility is a reaction to Jane Austen’s youthful reading. The cult of sensibility, which was prevalent in the literature of that time, argued that to have overpowering feelings was a sign of superior character. It followed that it was as wrong as it was hopeless to try to control or hide such feelings ...

  5. Character Analysis Elinor Dashwood. Elinor represents "sense" in this novel. Only nineteen, she is her mother's counselor, able to influence her in the direction of prudence. When Mrs. Dashwood wants to leave Norland Park, it is Elinor who prevents her from acting too hastily. She induces Marianne to look at things in a calmer, more sensible ...

  6. Sense and Sensibility (no Brasil, Razão e Sensibilidade[ 3] ou Razão e Sentimento, [ 4] em Portugal Sensibilidade e Bom-senso) é um romance da escritora Jane Austen. Foi o 1º livro de Austen a ser publicado, em 1811, e foi escrito sob o pseudônimo "A Lady". A história relata os relacionamentos de Elinor e Marianne Dashwood, duas filhas do ...

  7. Sense and Sensibility, published in 1811, is a novel by Jane Austen that follows the romantic lives of the Dashwood sisters, Elinor and Marianne. After their father dies and leaves their family in financial ruin, the sisters must navigate the complex world of love and marriage. Austen's keen observations and wit illuminate the stark contrast ...