Jane Eyre context
- Created by: Hikarasu
- Created on: 13-05-15 21:05
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- Context
- Jane Eyre
- Character who strongly resists traditional female norms. May not be a 'heroine' however as she does this for herself.
- Will not follow normal rules.
- Master! How is he my master? pg 15
- Reeds
- '''They are not fit to associate with me'' pg 34
- '''poverty for me was synonymous with degradation'' pg 30
- Jane does not marry Rochester until she is sure that she can look after herself- women were not supposed to do this
- Relationship with Rochester
- Ends in equality- ''to be together is for us to be at once as free as in solitude''. pg 519
- Master! How is he my master? pg 15
- Will not follow normal rules.
- Character who strongly resists traditional female norms. May not be a 'heroine' however as she does this for herself.
- Rochester
- Rochester is represented as a strong but FLAWED character in JE. Cannot deal with Bertha and so locks her away. Rough around the edges.
- Fire- weather stormy. Representative of a male victorian- are females the only ones struggling with society?
- Money
- Status
- Rochester is represented as a strong but FLAWED character in JE. Cannot deal with Bertha and so locks her away. Rough around the edges.
- Gothic description
- The gothic language was new and almost radical at the time. Further emphasises how Jane stands out from traditional female position.
- Why is JE written in the gothic?- Allows Bronte to enforce her ideas through a powerful, imposing language style.
- UntitleShaking my hair from my eyes, I lifted my head and tried to look boldly round the dark room: at this moment a light gleamed on the wall. Was it, I asked myself, a ray from the moon penetrating some aperture in the blind? No; moonlight was still, and this stirred; while I gazed, it glided up to the ceiling and quivered over my head. pg 21.
- Madness? Perhaps foreshadowing of Bertha's madness. Glimpses of Jane's inner madness- parallels.
- Does Jane let trauma overcome her? Is she weak as she attempts to find something to rely on?
- Jane in distress after she leaves Thornfield pg 372. Usually used to show weak females- Jane has done this BY CHOICE to fight for what SHE WANTS. represents STRENGTH.
- Pathetic fallacy- pg 10 represents how this will not be a happy novel.
- Cultural
- Culture in which Jane grows up stereotypes females
- The novel is focused on Jane's struggle to find her independence and fulfil her sense of self in a society that oppresses her
- Culture in which Jane grows up stereotypes females
- Jane Eyre
- John Reed
- Self-worth
- Marriage
- Jane rejects St. John's proposal- she wants something that makes her feel comforted and agrees with her. St. John does not provide this, and she cannot relate to his religious attitude.
- ' In 1847 the idea of marrying a handsome and courageous man and supporting him in his vocation would have been attractive to many readers'
- Jane rejects St. John's proposal- she wants something that makes her feel comforted and agrees with her. St. John does not provide this, and she cannot relate to his religious attitude.
- WSS comparison- Antoinette and Rochester's relationship does NOT end in equality- why? Antoinette easily submits. Unequal in personality to Rochester.
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