Vanity Fair

(3 customer reviews)

67.53

A biting satire of 19th-century British society that follows the fortunes of Becky Sharp and Amelia Sedley, two women navigating love, ambition, and status in a corrupt world.

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William Makepeace Thackeray’s Vanity Fair: A Novel without a Hero is a scathing satire of English society during and after the Napoleonic Wars. The novel centers around two very different heroines: the ambitious, cunning Becky Sharp and the gentle, naïve Amelia Sedley. While Amelia relies on tradition and romantic ideals, Becky uses her wit, charm, and manipulation to climb the social ladder, often at the expense of others. Thackeray presents a world driven by vanity, greed, and self-interest—where morality is negotiable and success often favors the most ruthless. The novel’s title is derived from John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress, symbolizing a world obsessed with superficial pleasures and social advancement. Through his omniscient and often ironic narrator, Thackeray delivers pointed commentary on hypocrisy, marriage, class privilege, and gender roles. Characters like the pompous Jos Sedley, the boorish Rawdon Crawley, and the callous George Osborne reflect the era’s moral emptiness. Thackeray’s refusal to provide a traditional hero or moral resolution emphasizes the book’s satirical tone. Despite her flaws, Becky Sharp remains one of literature’s most compelling and subversive female protagonists. Vanity Fair is a richly layered, darkly humorous portrait of a society where appearances reign and virtue is rarely rewarded.