Feminism In Jane Eyre

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Charlotte Bronte tells a riveting story through her novel Jane Eyre. The book is about Jane Eyre’s life from childhood to adulthood. Jane is an orphan that lives with an evil aunt. Jane is soon shipped off to an all-girls boarding school. Later in life she becomes a school teacher and then a governess. She meets new and interesting people and eventually settles downs with the love of her life. Charlotte Bronte creates a feminine character who is shaped after her own experiences, and who embarks on a hero’s journey to discover the truth about love. Feminism is a big theme throughout this novel. “The author indicates that Jane’s love is worth more than marriage to the master of Thornfield and warden of a pathetic raving wife locked away …show more content…

She also uses the character of Jane to live out fantasies that she couldn’t experience in her own life. One way she connects her life to the novel is that Charlotte went to Clergy Daughter Cowan Bridge when she was a little girl (Cody). Lowood, the school Jane went to, is supposed to represent the school that Charlotte went to in real life and judging by the way she speaks about Lowood seems that she didn’t have very fond memories of the school. A second connection between her real life and the novel is while at Clergy Daughter Cowan Bride, Charlotte’s sisters became ill and that parallels in Jane Eyre when Jane’s best friend got sick while at Lowood (Cody). Another way her life connects with the book is Charlotte and Jane’s profession. Both were a governess at one time. One way that Charlotte lives through Jane is that Jane ends up being with the love of her life and in real life Charlotte marries a man that she doesn’t love, (Cody). Charlotte Bronte does a good job in connecting her real life with Jane’s character and living out some of her own fantasies throughout her …show more content…

Jane is a bildungsroman protagonist. “Jane also embodies in a strong way the Bildungsroman protagonist’s search for a model or preceptor, the clearest example of which is Miss Temple at Lowood School. Jane does not find a vocation in the modern sense of career; her journey ends in marriage and a family. But she does pursue important goas in the course of Jane Eyre, and reaching these constitutes the decisive and, in the world of the text, happy ending of her quest (Mosely). The novel begins with Jane living with her evil aunt and cousins. She had been traumatized while living with them, so badly traumatized that a doctor has to be called to check on Jane. The doctor recommends to Jane’s aunt that she be put in school, this suggestion leads to the second part of her hero’s journey. Jane goes to an all-girls boarding school called “Lowood”. At Lowood, Jane meets her role model, a teacher named Miss Temple. Miss Temple helps Jane get through her good and bad times at Lowood, she even helps Jane to the next part of her journey, teaching. Jane doesn’t leave Lowood, instead she begins teaching with Miss Temple. Jane wasn’t completely happy in this stage of her journey so she decided to move on. Thornfield is the next stop, there she is a governess and falls in love with the man she works for, Rochester. Complications with their relationship occur so she leaves Thornfield to find

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