How Does Bronte Write A Literary Analysis Of Jane Eyre

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Literary Analysis of Jane Eyre Bronte utilizes tone, imagery, symbolism, point-of-view, setting, character, to examine both societal and internal issues which ensnare Jane Eyre.
The setting of Jane eyre is perhaps the most important literary tool employed by Bronte. The novel is set during George III’s reign-so right around the early 19th century- provides a perspective of social class, gender roles, and religion from a unique lense which would be lost during a different era. Gender roles would eventually be blurred, religion would later decline, and the distinctions between upper and lower classes would dwindle. But, in this time period, the rules are still set though occasionally challenged. The seeds for reform are being set, but change has not quite happened ( Jane serves to function as a new woman's role model; she was …show more content…

She frequently encounters members of both classes, but falls into neither of them herself. The novel as a whole uses this to challenge the strict hierarchy that Victorians adhered too. Her position as a governess requires her to have the mannerisms of an upper class individual, as governesses must train their pupils in etiquette, but also pays very little and keeps her economically level with the lower class (Themes). But the economic ideas of the Victorian era comes into play far before Jane becomes a governess. While she is living with the Reeds declares that, “Poverty looks grim to grown people; still more so to children: they have not much idea of industrious working, respectable poverty; they think of the word only as connected with ragged clothes, scanty food, fireless grates, rude manners, and debasing vices; poverty for me was synonymous with degradation” (Bronte 31). This clearly shows the ideas of lower classes ingrained from childhood by the society at the time. Though, as Jane grows she will challenge these

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