Relationship Between Men and Women: Jane Eyre and The Handmaid's Tale

1786 Words4 Pages

Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre entails a social criticism of the oppressive social ideas and practices of nineteenth-century Victorian society. The presentation of male and female relationships emphases men’s domination and perceived superiority over women. Jane Eyre is a reflection of Brontë’s own observation on gender roles of the Victorian era, from the vantage point of her position as governess much like Jane’s. Margaret Atwood’s novel was written during a period of conservative revival in the West partly fueled by a strong, well-organized movement of religious conservatives who criticized ‘the excesses of the sexual revolution.’ Where Brontë’s Jane Eyre is a clear depiction of the subjugation of women by men in nineteenth-century Western culture, Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale explores the consequences of a reversal of women’s rights by men. This twentieth-century tradition of dystopian novels is a possible influence, with classics like Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World and George Orwell’s 1984 standing prominence. The pessimism associated with novels of this genre—where society is presented as frightening and restrictive—exposes the gender inequality between men and women to be deleterious.

An aspect of the way male/female relationships are presented in both texts is the repression of female sexuality by men, possibly stemming from a subliminal fear of women attaining power in a male-dominated society. Brocklehurst—a possible reflection off Brontë’s Evangelical minister at Cowan Bridge, her own poorly ran school—is a male authoritative figure whose relationship with the girls at Lowood is one of imposed tyranny. He means to “tame and humble” them through deprivations and restrictions, but such removal of liberties like cutting ...

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... confinement by the world represents the nineteenth-century woman writer.”

Books

Brontë, Charlotte (2006) Jane Eyre (Penguin Classics)

Atwood, Margaret (1996) The Handmaid’s Tale (Contemporary Classics)

Journals

Bertens, H. (2001) Literary Theory: The Basics, (The Politics of Class: Marxism),

Abingdon, Routledge.

Sourced in AQA Critical Anthology LITB4/PM Issued September 2008

Gilbert, S., Gubar, S. (2000) The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and Nineteenth Century Literary Imagination Yale University Press

Dixon, R W (1886) personal letters

Sourced in Eagleton, M. (1996) Feminist Literary Theory: A Reader

Electronic Information

Edwards-Capes, Kirsty (2012) Gender and Sexism in Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre, available from

http://kirstycapes.co.uk/post/19688269684/gender-and-sexism-in-charlotte-brontes-jane-eyre

18th December 2013

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