Erica Chandler 29 January 2013 Dr. Smith Reading Response: Jane Eyre Vol. III Religion plays a prominent role in the life of Jane Eyre‚ and arguably the two most religious characters she encounters are Helen Burns and St. John Rivers. Both play similar—if slightly different—parts in Jane’s own personal faith. Both portray a noble and self-sacrificial Catholicism. But while Jane may admire these characters and try to emulate the qualities they possess‚ she ultimately bends toward her own style
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women had the right to vote for over fifty years‚ the Equal Rights Amendment had still not passed since it had been introduced to congress in 1923. With the inequality still widespread‚ it came as no surprise women were still fighting for their equality in all aspects of their lives. Many women in this time turned to newspapers and magazines for the news and advice on the topic of women’s liberation. One such magazine‚ Redbook‚ targeted young married women with children. Although the magazine
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of Comestibles in Jane Eyre Throughout Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre‚ Jane’s ambiguous social class is often a problematic force within the novel. One mechanism with which Bronte attempts to elucidate Jane’s standing during certain episodes in the novel may be the appearances of food strewn throughout the book. The particular foods provided to Jane – specifically bread and porridge – as well as the providers of the sustenance and the varied contexts in which they are given to Jane‚ indicate that Jane’s
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the Victorian Woman “Always remember‚ you have within you the strength‚ the patience‚ and the passion to reach for the stars to change the world." Harriet Tubman. This quote applies to Charlotte Bronte’s novel Jane Eyre‚ where the protagonist Jane‚ is living in the Victorian era where women have a specific role in society. Jane struggles with having to be confined to that role and like Tubman’s quote says to change the world‚ Jane has the desire to do that to her world. In the middle 1800’s‚ during
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24 January 2012 Pro-social Behaviour in Brontë’s Jane Eyre and Eliot’s Middlemarch “Sacrifice is an act of giving that is necessarily reciprocated‚” says Marcel Mauss in his work The Gift (21)‚ emphasizing the fact that the gift is never free and has to be repaid. While both Jane and Dorothea‚ the main characters of two great Victorian novels‚ made their kinds of sacrifice‚ it can be concluded that those sacrifices arose from two different causes. Pro-social behaviour or “set of actions that
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presented Helen Burns as a vision of what Victorian children where expected to have acted like. She was represented as pure‚ plain and had a strong Christian faith. Elaine Showalter had the belief that Helen was a projection of ‘the angel of spirituality’ and her mind was completely pure. Helen believed that once she passed away there would be an afterlife waiting for her‚ as she has been faithful to God. Just before she passes away she has a conversation with Jane discussing this topic. Helen trusts that
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Thomasina Coverly and Septimus Hodge in ’Arcadia’‚ with Jane Eyre and Mr.Rochester in ’Jane Eyre’? Early reviews of Arcadia remarked that Tom Stoppard‚ had at long last found his heart; due to almost three decades of plays that some saw more as intellectual exercises than heartfelt drama. This success could perhaps be explained by his focus on relationships within Arcadia‚ in particular‚ the relationship between his two leading characters‚ Thomasina Coverly and Septimus Hodge. Their relationship
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Jane is a character repeatedly subjected to violence and hatred from her adoptive family‚ The Reeds. Her experiences are scary and abuse her body and her mind and eventually shape her into who she will become later in her life. She is also often undermined and taken advantage of and therefore made to feel small and worthless. ‘Roughly and violently thrust me back – into the red-room‚ and locked me up there’ demonstrates the cruelty in which Jane Eyre is treated. The use of the power of three on
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Charlotte receives knowledgeable advice from Doctor Jacquith‚ He says “Not to make use of her free-will was like putting a blindfold over the eyes and letting somebody else lead her around” (51). Charlotte learns this valuable lesson throughout the novel. At first‚ she struggles with free-will but overcomes this fear by finding a purpose in life. She experiences freedom‚ love‚ and relationships far from home. Her mother took her identity by controlling every outcome. She was unfamiliar with the
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one emotion‚ one thing is for sure‚ it gives people a greater purpose for existence‚ a reason to live and die for‚ something beyond them to devote their life. Jane Eyre‚ by Charlotte Brontë and A Tale of Two Cities‚ by Charles Dickens‚ are two popular‚ classic examples of love. Thesis: While both novels have a central theme of love‚ Jane Eyre focuses on the search for love while A Tale of Two Cities interprets the love for family‚ as well as‚ the search for new relationships. Compare: Contrast
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