Mansfield Park follows the story of Fanny Price, a poor relation sent to live with her wealthy aunt and uncle at Mansfield Park. As she grows up alongside her spoiled cousins, Fanny faces judgement and scrutiny as an outsider. She eventually catches the eye of her cousin Edmund, though he is distracted by the charming Mary Crawford. The novel examines social class and family duty. Fanny’s place in the household as a dependent contrasts with the Bertrams and Crawfords’ privilege. Fanny’s steadfast ethics serve as a moral compass, even as the vogue for looser morals spreads through the fashionable set. Central themes involve the social roles and expectations for women at the time, as different female characters represent various options from self-interested marriage to wifely duty. Mansfield Park also explores the concept of theatricality, with private theatricals at Mansfield Park demonstrating how appearances and performance do not always reflect reality. With her trademark wit and insight, Austen crafts a complex world filled with multilayered characters, romantic entanglements and cutting social commentary. Mansfield Park stands as one of Austen’s most controversial works for its rigorous morality and criticism of social hypocrisy.