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Inc. Cliffs Notes - Cliffsnotes Vanity Fair (Cliffs Notes)

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This satirical novel of manners will fascinate the careful reader. The story of the various fortunes of two women in 19th-century England is filled with sly irony and tongue-in-cheek humor, yet it offers the leisurely reader a chance to find subtle meanings.

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title Vanity Fair Notes author Bennett Mildred R - photo 1

title:Vanity Fair : Notes ...
author:Bennett, Mildred R.
publisher:John Wiley & Sons, Inc. (US)
isbn10 | asin:
print isbn13:9780822013204
ebook isbn13:9780764513404
language:English
subjectThackeray, William Makepeace,--1811-1863.
publication date:1964
lcc:
ddc:820.9008
subject:Thackeray, William Makepeace,--1811-1863.
Page i
Page 1 Vanity Fair Notes by Mildred R Bennett University of - photo 2
Page 1
Vanity Fair
Notes
by
Mildred R. Bennett
University of Nebraska
including
Introduction to the Novel
Life of the Author
Summaries and Commentaries
Critical Analysis
Character Analyses
Questions for Review
Selected Bibliography
INCORPORATED LINCOLN NEBRASKA 68501 Page 2 Editor Gary - photo 3
INCORPORATED
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA 68501
Page 2
Editor
Gary Carey, M.A.
University of Colorado
Consulting Editor
James L. Roberts, Ph.D.
Department of English
University of Nebraska
ISBN 0-8220-1320-7
Copyright 1964 by
Cliffs Notes, Inc.
All Rights Reserved
Printed in U.S.A.
1999 Printing
The Cliffs Notes logo, the names ''Cliffs" and "Cliffs Notes," and the black and yellow diagonal-stripe cover design are all registered trademarks belonging to Cliffs Notes, Inc., and may not be used in whole or in part without written permission.
Cliffs Notes, Inc. Lincoln, Nebraska
Page 3
Contents
Introduction
5
About the Author
5
Summaries and Critical Commentaries
7
Critical Analysis
50
Characters
61
Questions
72
Selected Bibliography
74

Page 5
Introduction
Vanity Fair, a satirical novel of manners, was published (1847-48) in serial form without sufficient time for revisions by Thackeray. Occasionally, time sequences are not clear. Names are not always consistent; for example, Mrs. Bute Crawley is sometimes Martha, sometimes Barbara. Glorvina, sister of Peggy O'Dowd, is also called Glorvina O'Dowd, as if she were Major O'Dowd's sister. Promotion in military status may change titles, and advancement in society may change rank and title. In spite of the confusion, Vanity Fair fascinates the careful reader.
Over a hundred years ago when this book was written, readers had time to savor Thackeray's various digressions into morals, psychology, and human foibles. The modern reader may be bewildered by the rambling, and by the vast number of characters, some of whom appear only as names. However, he will have no trouble following the six main characters through changes of fortune and, in some cases, of outlook. Any curiosity aroused concerning a character will be satisfied by the time one has finished the story.
For the purposes of this study, the book has been divided into the original installments as published. This set of notes does not attempt to take the place of reading the book. It would be impossible to catch the sly irony, the tongue-in-cheek humor of Thackeray's remarks on the human race without reading Vanity Fair at sufficient leisure to realize its subtle meanings.
Of necessity, because of the length of the book, this condensation must leave out many incidents and commentaries by the author. For this reason, also, the student is urged to read Vanity Fair for himself.
About the Author
William Makepeace Thackeray was born at Calcutta in 1811. His father, Richmond Thackeray, had been an Indian civil servant, as had William's grandfather. His mother was nineteen at the date of his birth, was left a widow in 1816, and married Major Henry Carmichael Smyth in 1818.
On his way to England from India, the small Thackeray saw Napoleon on St. Helena. His attendance at a school run by a Dr. Turner gave him experience later used in Vanity Fair.
Always an independent spirit, he went his own way, attending various schools, but leaving Cambridge without taking a degree. His relatives
Page 6
wanted him to study law; he leaned toward the fine arts. At Trinity College, Cambridge, he contributed to a little paper called The Snob.
A visit to Weimar bore fruit in the sketches of life at a small German court which appear in Vanity Fair. In 1832 he inherited a sum which amounted to about five hundred pounds a year. The money was soon lostsome in an Indian bank, some at gambling, and some in two newspapers, The National Standard and The Constitutional.
About 1834 Thackeray went to Paris and took up the study of art. He had early shown talent as a caricaturist. His pencil was at its best in such fantastic work as is found in the initial letters of the chapters in his books, and in those drawings made for the amusement of children.
He married Isabella, an Irish girl, daughter of Colonel Matthew Shawe, who enchanted him with her singing, and who was the model for Amelia in
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