With age comes change. This is especially true for Jane in Charlotte Bronte’s novel Jane Eyre. Jane Eyre is a dynamic character that changes from a mistreated, spirited little girl to an mature, independent woman with her own values.…
In the novel Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte wants the readers to be able to have insight about what it was like growing up as a female during this era. In my analysis of the book, I found that the novel did a great job portraying what it is was like for women to grow up in the era that the book takes place in. Women is this period of time were treated with disrespect, and were forced to be a typically housemaid and were not allowed to have real jobs. When Jane Eyre was growing up, she was often shunned by her aunt and cousins and was taken into rooms to be locked in with no one else. In my opinion, this shows how poorly women, young girls in particular, were treated. In addition to women being treated incompetently, they also had far less personal…
Music has been and always will be a way for a person to release their thoughts and emotions into the world. It keeps the hope alive that someone will hear their lyrics and understand, and make their listener feel less alone. Music is an indefinable force. A force that inspires action, creates unity, and allows a person to face their emotions just like how the musician confronted theirs. Like many others, Jane Eyre braves her emotions through different music styles that parallel her emotions and raises her to action.…
This excerpt from Jane Eyre reveals Jane’s character in contrast to her cousins Georgiana and John Reed. While her cousins were spoiled and went unpunished, Jane was considered a pain no matter what she did. After John throws a book at her, Jane has a violent outbreak, which Mrs. Reed determines to be her sole responsibility and sends her to the red room to be punished. Brontë establishes these characters early on in the novel with parallelism and imagery; this preliminary characterization is seen later in the character’s actions and their growth.…
Jane Eyre, Bertha and Jane all at some point within the texts face the same fate of being sealed in a room against their own will and are isolated from the outside world. The way, in which Brontë writes allows the reader to sympathize with Jane Eyre’s emotions, experience, including her isolation in the red room. Jane Eyre is a young orphan isolated from her parents due to their death, she lives with her aunt and cousins, she is abused by her cousin John and receives punishment for Johns actions as a young child Jane Eyre recalls that “I shall remember how you thrust me back . . . into the red-room. . . . And that punishment you made me suffer because your wicked boy struck me—knocked me down for nothing.CITATION Cha47 \p 35 \l 1033 (Brontë 35)” Locked into this empty room Jane Eyre becomes physically isolated from the world. Contrasted to Jane in The Yellow Wallpaper the difference is that Gilman’s Jane is trapped within the social world, of John, her “husband”, who also constantly manipulated Jane. He secluded her from the entire world, and he was known as the reason she went mad. If he had not forced her to sit in her room day as seen when Jane says, “I sometimes fancy that in my condition, if I had less opposition and more society and stimulus after day from the rest of the world,”CITATION Gil92 \p 60 \l 1033…
While reading this book, the reader may pity Jane. Charlotte Bronte creates a consistent thread until the end of the book. Jane struggles with the same problem throughout the work, which is betrayal. She deals with it a place that was supposed to be her home, school and the work place.…
The novel Jane Eyre is a story about a stoic woman who fights her entire life through many trials and tribulations until she finds true love and achieves an almost nirvana-like state of being. The manner, in which Charlotte Bronte writes, her tone and diction especially, lends its self to the many purposes of the novel. The diction of Bronte usually had characteristics of gothic culture and showed the usually negative and angry inner thoughts of Jane. The tone of the novel was there sympathetic towards Jane and displayed her as an intelligent and kind person who has been given a terrible lot in life. This allows the audience to feel connected with Jane because most people have gone through times in their life where they have felt similar emotions to that of Jane. This common thread between Jane and the audience allowed Bronte to better explain the internal struggles of Jane Eyre.…
Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre illustrates the significance of self-respect, confidence, and integrity in overcoming several predicaments. Bronte portrays this through Jane, who possesses both a sense of self-worth and dignity, which are continually tested and depicted throughout the novel. These attributes are illustrated when she refuses St. John’s hand in marriage, leaves Rochester after discovering his secret that he is married, and when she bravely stands up to Mrs. Reed.…
Jane is reminded of her plain appearance from the very beginnings of the novel. Miss Abbot talks about young Jane’s plainness when she says, "if she were a nice, pretty child, one might compassionate her forlornness; but one really cannot care for such a little toad as that." This comment really displays how women in that era were often judged by their beauty, or lack-there-of. Miss Abbot is essentially saying that if Jane were pretty, it could make up for her dreary disposition. Then, she blatantly says she is as ugly as a “toad”. Jane is told often that she is unattractive when she is young, and those words carry their way into her adulthood. Without a loving person in her life to dote on her simple beauty, Jane forms a view on of herself based on others words. Jane explains how she sees her lack of beauty, “…
Mrs. Reed and her family weren’t ever mean to Jane when Mr. Reed was alive. After he died that’s when it all began. Mrs. Reed told her children that Jane was not worthy to be noticed and they shouldn’t associate with her (Bronte 23).She thinks because Jane is poor and not hers she can treat her any way she wants. Mrs. Reed also even lied on Jane to get her out of her house. This is what she said Mr. Brocklehurst” her mother was her husband 's sister. On his deathbed he exhorted her to care for Jane. She always treated her as one of her own. If you accept her at Lowood School, Mr. Brocklehurst, keep a strict eye on her. She has a heart of spite. I 'm sorry to say that her worst fault is that of deceit (Bronte 30).”…
A statement against her treatment is seen when she argues, “Personally, I disagree with their ideas. Personally, I believe that congenial work, with excitement and change, would do me good. But what is one to do?” (648). While Jane does oppose the treatment she’s under, the question exposes that she must conform to the decision made by both her husband and brother. Surface level, it can be seen that she is in disagreement, however, with closer inspection, inferences can be made. The way that Jane is unwilling to resist this provides a hint that this could be the status quo for her. Furthermore, this conformity is put into greater context when Jane says John, “is very careful and loving, and hardly lets me stir without special direction.” (648). This background information fleshes out the relationship between Jane and John by making it seem as though it is natural for him to dominate her…
In each place that Jane resides throughout her life, Bronte created an environment in which Jane felt misplaced in the social hierarchy. At Gateshead, Mrs. Reed and her children continually bully Jane into believing that she is not worthy of notice. Facing a similar situation at Lowood, Jane is made out to be an outsider as Mr.Brocklehurst attempts to turn Jane’s pupils against her. Lastly, at Thornfield, Jane faces a different sense of isolation in which she has more class than the servants, but less class than the Ingram party. Bronte’s use of this motif sheds light on the life of women living in the nineteenth century and their struggle to find a place in…
Her honesty is based on what she believes is true and fair, not necessarily what others may believe, and without regard for what may happen next. For example, she shouts accusingly at Mrs. Reed, “People think you a good woman, but you are bad, hard-hearted. You are deceitful!” (Brontë 44). Even though this could worsen their already strained relationship, Jane states her opinion in order to defend herself against the unfair judgements put on her by Mr. Brocklehurst.…
Essentially, as this early portrayal of Jane is used for more noteworthy study as the novel advances, the initial couple of parts of the book overall are formative in nature; while the reader is never really made conscious of the real formation of the developed figure, as the reader is acquainted with Jane after her earliest stages, and after she now live with the Reeds as a kid, Bronte utilizes the space to investigate the early advancement and indication of an advanced part of her gender. Jane's vicinity at Gateshead conduces to a regular movement towards the second phase of Bronte's study, which depends on the young person's vicinity at school, a transitional space that takes into consideration the making of a little society inside a hardly household circle. According to her Renascence: Essays on Values in Literature, Aubrey L. Mishou states, “Jane's defiance violates standards for children, but perhaps girls especially; while the sex of those involved in the primary conflicts of Jane Eyre is not to be questioned, the gender identification assigned to them by Charlotte Bronte is ripe for analysis. From the first introduction of Jane, the reader is shown that she is essentially other in comparison to her cousins, who arguably represent the English social status quo. This otherness is largely defined in contrast with the low cerebral capacity expected of Victorian femininity.”…
Set in the nineteenth century, Jane Eyre describes a woman’s continuous journey through life in search of acceptance and inner peace. Each of the physical journeys made by the main character, Jane Eyre, have a significant effect on her emotions and cause her to grow and change into the woman she ultimately becomes. Her experiences at Lowood School, Thornfield Hall, Moor house, and Ferndean ingeniously correspond with each stage of Jane’s inner quest and development from an immature child to an intelligent and sophisticated woman…