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| Bennet Family | Member | The Bennet family are the central household of Pride and Prejudice, residing at Longbourn estate in Hertfordshire. Mr. Bennet is a gentleman of modest income whose property is entailed away to a male heir, meaning his wife and five daughters face potential poverty upon his death. This precarious situation drives Mrs. Bennet's single-minded obsession with marrying her daughters to wealthy men. The five Bennet sisters - Jane, Elizabeth, Mary, Kitty, and Lydia - span a range of temperaments from Jane's gentle goodness to Lydia's reckless impulsiveness, with Elizabeth's sharp intelligence and independent spirit at the centre. The family's position in the rural gentry - respectable but not wealthy, well-bred but with embarrassing relations in trade - places them in an awkward social position that shapes every interaction with the wealthier families who enter their orbit. The contrast between the sisters' different approaches to love, duty, and social expectation forms the heart of the novel. |