Anna. The novel is named after her.
We follow with interest the peculiar twists of the heroine’s fate: first, we see a cheerful and spirited village girl who doesn’t want to use the privileges allotted to her as a “young lady.” Then she is surrounded by luxury, servants, teachers, and governesses. But it’s not only changes in the external conditions of life that transform Anna. What matters most is her spiritual insight—what she managed to separate true values from the glitter, the outwardly showy world—from the modest but truly moral, pure one.
The main thing is that Anna is a woman, and she also guessed her true purpose in life.