Sunday, 14 January 2018

The House of Mirth, Edith Wharton

Edith Wharton explores upper class society in late 19th Century America. She is powerfully critical of almost all who are, or aspire to be in and around, that social circle. Through Lily Bart she shows a woman born into a high society family who ended up with very little money. Her upbringing left her with social skills and a sense of entitlement, as well as a fear of living without luxury.  

Wharton presents Edith as a figure we should feel empathy for. She is charming and through her tightrope existence she exposes the hypocrisies and unnecessary, arbitrary rules of the class. Bart is both relatable and exasperating, she is in a constant state of ambivalence; seeing the society for what it is and priding herself on being able to manipulate it's members, though completely unable to commit to being one of 'them' - though that is what she desperately wants.

It is a good read, though the ending is a little dramatic and not as interesting as it could have been - a product of it's time perhaps.