English teacher Lauren Cavarra discusses whether Jane Austen's novel critiques the social structures that constrain women, or seems to accept their inevitability.
Please just make the exact same videos you made almost 10 years ago. Same type of cartoon, same narrator. Those were absolutely amazing. I listened to them for years. PLEASE bring those videos back.
This used to be a channel of quality graphic novels; I would rather it be left alone instead of populated with low-tier videos of god knows what purpose
That’s EXACTLY what my comment was about. I want the same narrator and the same animation. The videos were incredible. I’ve watched them for YEARS and recommend them to other people. Please bring that style back!!!!
Lydia's actions will have more consequences. This can be a deterrent for misbehavior. Society would first blame Lydia's upbringing and that would reflected on her sister Elizabeth having been brought up the same way.
Lidia's father was a fool and her mother was worse. It was valid for society to reject the Bennet's once their character had been revealed by Lidia. What the book doesn't show you, is how the simp Darcy will inevitably rue his decision as his wife (Elizabeth) inevitably becomes her mother.
I hope all the good for you. It will be more better if you could deversify the content by adding some internationally recognized writers like camus or najib mahfoud...