Reed did not care at all of what had happened to Jane and she also didn’t care who started it first or whose fault it was because either way Jane was the only to get blamed and punished for these situations. Mrs. Reed punished Jane and sent her to the “Red Room”. The “Red Room” was where Jane’s uncle passed away therefore while Jane was in there for a couple of hours since she wasn’t going to be in there for long, she experienced a horrific and obscure scene. What Jane had seen left her traumatize so she began yelling and Mrs. Reed only punished her more by keeping her in that room for much longer. Jane was left so traumatised that when she was let out of there the maids were so worried about her that they persuaded Mrs. Reed to call an Apothecary. An Apothecary is a person who is a paid doctor but in this case he was the doctor for when the servants got sick. The Apothecary helped Jane with her mental breakdown. Mr. Lloyd who is the Apothecary’s name was basically Janes therapist and he asked her many questions and helped her relieve some of her pain and speak about what she has been going through. Later Mr. Lloyd suggested to Mrs. Reed that Jane should begin to attend school. Mrs. Reed fortunately agreed and looked into a school named…
Gender is a social status, a legal designation, and a personal identity and unlike sex, it is not determined biologically but rather it is determined by social constructs. In the novel Jane Eyre, written by Charlotte Brontë, binary gender is explored. This novel questions the processes and practices that construct gender identities and gender social statuses. The characters in Jane Eyre clash with rigid feminine and masculine roles that are typically stereotyped but does not ultimately question the status quo. During the Victorian era, your gender determined what you were and were not able to do as well as how you went about achieving what you wanted to do. Jane, being the rebellious character that she is, criticizes the social roles of women…
Victorian mores are the unspoken rules known and observed by society. In the eighteen-hundreds several mores were very important including justice, Christianity, high standards of honesty and morality, and women’s roles. All good people are part of a family, a Christian family and women are to serve men as they stand unequal to them. Marriage is simply a tool to gain more money and connections, and only people of the same social class are worthy of each other. Whichever social class someone is born into they remain in unless of course they are rich or beautiful, the poor and plain are simply there to be the butlers, maids and governesses of those who are high up. Several of these mores are demonstrated and contradicted in Charlotte Bronte’s 1847 masterpiece Jane Eyre. Jane Eyre is the life story of a young heroin that faces incredible odds and terrible situations and still manages to follow her heart and morals through an exciting life that leads her to a blissful ending. Charlotte Bronte uses her narrative to display several of the Victorian mores and demonstrate why they’re important, and alternately disprove the significance of others.…
In the novel To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee focuses more on the aspect of racial discrimination rather than “poor white trash” discrimination (Hovet 187). It is so conspicuous that a man loses his life because of it. While the discrimination is more prominent regarding race, the Finch family is also greatly discriminated against throughout the novel. Racism is very prominent in the novel To Kill a Mockingbird, as evidenced when Tom Robinson, a black man, is accused of raping a white woman in the 1930s South; because of his innocence and untimely death, all lives in the novel will be changed forever, including Atticus Finch.…
In the novel To Kill A Mockingbird there are many forms of prejudice. One would be the act of racism. Another would be the act of discrimination because of their lifestyle class. The last example would be not accepting somebody or someone into your society because of who they are.…
Imagine a world in which the tall people gave orders to short people. In this world, tall people got the best of everything and short people essentially got their rejects. Of course, short mates with short and tall mates with tall, creating a never ending cycle. Black people experienced this every day.…
In To Kill A MockingBird there are characters who are discriminated for their race, gender, and class. Tom Robinson is one of the characters who is discriminated for his skin color, he was falsely accused of raping a white woman, Mayella Ewell by Bob being known as a dangerous man. There was never actual proof that Tom actually raped Mayella. Living in a racist town the people decide to belive Mayella amd Bob who are white instead of listening to Tom whos is black, the people assumed that he did it because of his skin color. Atticus is discriminated because it’s his job as an attorney to defend Tom who is accused of raping a woman.…
Since the first time race was applied to humans in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, there has been a common pattern that sees people not having a western European background as different (Steckley, 2014). Steckley (2014) defines discrimination as the action of treating individuals differently because of their race. Stereotypes are overstated generalized descriptions made about a race or group (Steckley, 2014). Prejudice and stereotypes are closely related in the sense that prejudice involves having a pre-judge perception about a race (Steckley, 2014). Racism on the other hand is formed when a certain group creates a stereotype about a race, which leads to the construction of prejudice regarding that race, and inevitably discrimination towards the race (Steckley, 2014). Racism is institutionalized when racism becomes ingrained into the system, in terms of laws and practices (Steckley, 2014).…
In TKAM there was much discrimination and prejudice against innocent, harmless and kind Mockingbird type characters. The theme of discrimination and prejudice ran rampant throughout the town of Maycomb County in the 1930's. Acts of hatred and misunderstanding took place all because of someone’s colour. The characters Arthur “Boo” Radley, Tom Robinson and Atticus Finch all portray kind hearted mockingbirds who are innocent victims of discrimination throughout this novel.…
Discrimination can be embodied in a variety of ways. Any judgments made based on human differences and preferences that favor one group over another may be viewed as discrimination. Discrimination, itself, stems from ignorance, which occurs when unfocused hatred is spewed forth. In Harper Lee’s novel To Kill a Mockingbird racism is not the only discrimination. There are many types of discrimination like discrimination against age, gender, and economic status.…
America is often admired because its people can live the “American Dream”, or the ability of people to achieve success and a better life. Compared to many of the poor and autocratic countries this is true. But, people often forget that there are still issues with racism and predigest ideas. For example minorities, along with gay and transgender people of America, do not get the same opportunities as white, straight people. Minorities, gays, and transgender people are still looked at and treated differently, this interferes with the opportunities they deserve but do not receive due to their “differences”. In the America of “The Great Gatsby” they are not even spoken of or apart of the picture; every main character in the novel is white and straight…
The definition of discrimination is “the unjust or prejudicial treatment of different categories of people or things, especially on the grounds of groups of race,age,sex.” In To Kill a Mockingbird all forms of discrimination are shown. The book To Kill a Mockingbird takes places in Maycomb, Alabama in the 1930’s, at this time discrimination was very common especially when it came to race due to segregation. There is still discrimination around the world to this today.…
Scout Finch as “a tomboy most frequently clad in overalls, Scout spends much of her time with her older brother Jem and is constantly trying to prove herself his equal.” Throughout the novel, Scout is impacted by gender discrimination, along with other women in Maycomb. Aunt Alexandra tells Scout a few times that she could not hope to be a lady if she wore breeches. Aunt Alexandra also expects Scout to play with stoves, tea sets, and necklaces. Aunt Alexandra is not the only person who discriminates women. Even Atticus, who does not judge anyone, also discriminates against women. On page 221, Atticus tells Jem that women are not allowed to serve on juries in Alabama. Atticus even jokes that the court would never get a complete case tried with…
In the 1930s, in which the Harper Lee’s iconic To Kill a Mockingbird is set, de jure and de facto segregation was common across America, especially in the deep south of Alabama. Black Americans were constantly told that they were inferior to white people and deserved to be treated as so. The majority of America’s white population found nothing erroneous with their derogatory actions and environment of mistreatment that they helped curate. In To Kill a Mockingbird, the atmosphere of segregation and discrimination affects Scout and the other children through their interactions with Dolphus Raymond, Tom Robinson and his trial, and the Ewells.…
Throughout history many people have had to endure rejection of many types for many reasons. Some had to do with where they came from. Others had to do with when they lived in history. Both the author, Charlotte Brontë, and her character, Jane Eyre, represent the “outsider,” the free spirit struggling for recognition and self-respect in the face of rejection by a class-ridden and gender-oriented society.…