The series from 1995. I had seen it as a schoolchild when it came out but now I see it with new eyes. Rather than the romance that we’re meant to be focusing on when watching it, I couldn’t help but concentrate on the behaviour of the lower classes towards the upper. Mr Darcy is the richest character in it, he has a stately home with huge grounds, and an income of £10K a year (equivalent to around £1 million a year now). He appears to get his income by being a landlord, renting out properties on his estate.

Mr Darcy doesn’t appear to work, he’s never even been in the army like may rich men did then. He doesn’t even go to the trouble of managing his own estate, but has a steward to do that. He does nothing but go to balls, have dinner and sit around with his friends.

So basically he is a typical upper-class scrounger. He lives off the hard work of others, raking in rents, and gets a very luxurious lifestyle by doing this. And yet, the lower classes, the people who do all his work for him and pay him the money he lives off, have to show him great respect instead of vice versa. Every time a lower class person such as a servant appears in his presence, they have to bow and curtsey to him and call him My Lord. Even though their hard work is what keeps him alive.

And he is so snobby towards those below him, even towards other landed gentry who are a bit poorer than him. And it’s so similar to rich people today. I just wonder what goes on in the head of someone like that. Other people do everything for you but you think you’re better than them. How does that even compute in someone’s mind?

It’s so crazy that this is still going on in the 21st century, especially with the royals. Prince William is a shitty landlord who owns 600 rental properties that poor people live in, he lets them go to rack and ruin so the families live in mould and damp and struggle to pay their rent so William can live in luxury, yet instead of being grateful he expects people to curtsey to him and call him Sir wherever he goes.

The royal family have four palaces as well as multiple other homes, Buckingham Palace alone has 775 rooms. There are nearly one million unoccupied homes in the UK. Of these, over 265K are long-term unoccupied, mostly owned by rich individuals and rich corporations. There are also 280K second homes in the UK. Meanwhile there are over 354K homeless people in the UK. Not to mention millions more struggling to pay rent to landlords. All of these homeless people could be housed with room to spare, and many more could be freed from the burden of rent.

Why is the most respect and deference given to those who hoard this wealth so that others go without, who feather their own nests at the expense of everyone else? We are long overdue for a revolution.

  • eldavi@lemmy.ml
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    6 days ago

    i see jane austen’s and other similar works as 17th/18th century equivalents of the kardashians; where people idolize the rich and mimic them as much as possible.

    it’s also the reason why i have the most difficulty accepting that a leftist future is possible when we’re so proned to worship this type of lifestyle while simultaneously deride the people who don’t measure up to it.

    • DefinitelyNotAPhone [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      6 days ago

      When education is not liberating, the dream of the oppressed is to become the oppressor. If all the average person can imagine is possibly being fantastically wealthy one day, then all they will fantasize about is being the rich failson drinking away the family fortune.