By reading both Jane and Bertha together‚ it is clear that Bertha is a vehicle through which Jane’s inner conflicts and desire for freedom are brought to life. Brontë successfully portrays this through her use of language‚ mirror imagery and constant proximity between the two characters. Firstly‚ both Jane Eyre and Bertha Mason are perceived by Victorian society similarly – they are both unwanted‚ unnoticed and unfitting to their surroundings‚ with Bertha being locked away as a result of her supposed
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Jane Austen: An Early Feminist Writer Jane Austen‚ the novelist from the early 19th century‚ clearly showed ongoing feminist themes in her novels‚ especially “Pride and Prejudice”. A woman who fights for the rights and equality of women though she had to live with inequality and injustice in her own life is a feminist. In this regard‚ Jane Austen proved herself to be a feminist and through her literary works‚ such as “Pride and Prejudice” she proves it again and again with certain themes. Marriage
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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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The novel‚ Jane Eyre‚ describes the transformation from childhood to adulthood of an orphaned girl named Jane. Bertha Mason‚ is portrayed as the alter ego of the orphaned girl‚ Jane Eyre. This statement could be interrupted in many ways. One being-for an example- Bertha being a symbol and representation of Jane’s feeling in regard to the situation of her marrying Rochester. Another is some likeliness of both women’s actions. Jane Eyre may feel as if the matter of marriage is oppressing her. The
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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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classes in Charles Dickens’ Oliver Twist and Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre have no way of achieving higher status unless they come across a miracle‚ such as receiving a previously unknown inheritance. This is shown in both the novels of Jane Eyre and Oliver Twist. Both of the main characters grow up in similar situations; they are both orphans and because of that fact they are treated like they were criminals from birth. Although Jane is better off than Oliver in the places that she lives‚ they both
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recurring images and demonstrate how Charlotte Brontë uses them in Jane Eyre. One of the most interesting aspects in the story of Jane Eyre is Charlotte Brontë’s ability to use metaphors in order to convey Jane’s feelings towards the world around her‚ and her feelings for it. The most frequently appearing example of this is the use of water and fire imagery‚ which is displayed through the emotions and actions of the main characters‚ Jane Mr. Rochester‚ and to a certain extent St. John Rivers. The
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Compare the ways in which Charlotte Brontë and Maya Angelou present male characters‚ through detailed discussion of Jane Eyre and wider reference to I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings Jane Eyre is an early insight into how proto-feminists were regarded in the 19th century‚ where a women’s role was stereotypically to be seen and not heard. Charlotte Bronte uses the character Jane Eyre as a platform to express the imbalance of equality between the two genders and uses a series of male characters
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Socrates walks into a cave and confronts a strange man. MARCEOUS Socrates‚ we have some things to discuss‚ dear friend. SOCRATES And what might that be‚ Marceous? MARCEOUS I have watched you spread your wisdom to many. The young‚ the old‚ the rich‚ and the poor. You claim not to be the wisest man alive‚ but that is what truly makes you the wisest of any. You know when you do not. You teach others about things that you‚ yourself‚ do not even know. I told you I would return to you one day‚ to acquire
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friendships at Lowood‚ her love of Mr Rochester and her time with the Rivers family‚ Jane ’s character remains strong and vigilant despite the hardships she endures. Through the course of the novel‚ Jane ’s character changes slightly but moreover reinforces itself as Jane uses people‚ situations and her personal experiences to gain knowledge‚ and assist her gaining her full character. From when she was a child‚ Jane had forthright values of herself and an example is when she reprimanded John Reed for
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