Jane Eyre: A Coming of Age Story Charlotte Bronte’s novel‚ Jane Eyre‚ is a coming of age story‚ about a young‚ orphaned‚ and submissive girl growing up‚ through many hardships‚ into a young‚ passionate‚ and free willed woman. Charlotte Bronte begins the story with a ten-year-old Jane Eyre living with an impartial and sometimes cruel aunt‚ Aunt Reed. Aunt Reed‚ after neglecting Jane for the whole of her life‚ finally decides to send her away to boarding school‚ to Lowood School. Upon her departure
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The story I read for my book report is an E.B White classic‚ Stuart Little. The setting takes place in the nineteen nineties in the city of New York. The purpose of this story is to entertain the reader. The reason why it is to entertain is because in real life mice can’t talk‚ drive boats‚ and drive cars. The main characters are Stuart‚ Marlago‚ and the Little family. Stuart is a city mouse. Marlago is a bird. The Little’s are a human family with a mom‚ dad‚ and one son. The genre of this book
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of her aunt‚ treated rudely by her aunt Mrs. Reed and her children. After her uncle Mr. Reed’s death,Mrs. Reed sends her to a charity school in Lowood. Maltreated by the authorities‚ Jane stays there for 8 long years. Then Jane gets a position of governess in the family of Mr. Rochester‚ a rich squire. Rochester falls in love with Jane‚ and she with him. They are about to be married when Jane breaks the engagement on the wedding day and flees away‚ learning that Mr. Rochester has a mad wife secretly
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Charlotte Brontë uses the four elements as symbolism for Brontë uses fire to represent uncontrollable passion. This passion first manifests itself in Jane’s upbringing with the Reeds. Mrs. Reed looks on Jane “as a compound of virulent passions‚ mean spirit‚ and dangerous duplicity.” (22) Passion is reintroduced in the dreary setting of Lowood with Jane’s highly religious friend‚ Helen Burns. In the scene of her death‚ although Helen is described as “cold and thin‚” she is burning with passionate
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To varying degrees‚ Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre addresses the expectations of gender roles presently common in Victorian novels during the nineteenth century. Even in modern day society‚ the view of man tends to be aggressive‚ dominative‚ and ambitious‚ while women are portrayed as emotional‚ subservient‚ and sometimes passive. Bronte’s depiction of the stereotypical male and female roles are accurate‚ but she also displays how one’s gender can be altered. Jane‚ the novel’s protagonist‚ is a cookie-cutout
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Eyre. This theme is also developed in The Wide Sargasso Sea‚ by Jean Rhys. Both pieces present different types of isolation‚ such as isolation due to location and the isolation of a character due to their social status‚ such as Jane’s status as a governess. The various ways in which isolation is present in each of the texts show how inescapable and unavoidable isolation is for the characters in both Jane Eyre and The Wide Sargasso‚ with it being present in such a large way in their lives. Physical
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Women’s Portrayal in 19th Century Literature In the 19th century women were suppose to be the perfect wife‚ mother‚ and lady. Women were set to a standard by Coventry Patmore in his poem The Angel in the House. In which he describes what the perfect woman does‚ inspired by his wife Emily’s actions. The Angel in the House is meant to reinforce the Victorian ideal of feminine self-sacrifice‚ submissiveness‚ and motherly devotion. In novels like Pride and Prejudice and Jane Eyre the idea of the Angel
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In the novel Jane Eyre‚ charlotte Bronte displays the different stages of maturity an individual goes through from childhood to when they become an adult. Bronte shows this idea of maturity clearly in Jane Eyre character. Jane Eyre is a dynamic character as throughout the novel she changes her decisions and ideas according to the situations she faces. Jane’s action and decision making in the novel demonstrates the growth in her maturity from a rude wilful child to an ambitious young lady and how
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uses characters will opposite personalities to reveal more about them‚ and to keep the reader from overlooking many of the major characters’ traits. For instance‚ without Blanche‚ who is a foil of Jane‚ one may have thought Jane a simple and plain governess and nothing more. Similarly‚ without St. John the reader could have missed Rochester’s passionate side‚ or with no Mrs. Reed how supportive Miss Temple really is. Using foils‚ Brontë reveals more about the personalities of the major characters‚ and
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describing her first impressions of Bly. For example when the governess says “I remember as a thoroughly pleasant impression the broad‚ clear front‚ its open windows and fresh curtains and the pair of maids looking out” readers are provided with clear imagery of what the governess is seeing‚ therefore enabling readers to identify with the protagonist and view the situation from her perspective. This intimate identification with the governess later contributes to the disturbance of readers as‚ when the
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