Jane Eyre Research Paper

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Majority of all romance novels follow a guideline of some sort that classify them as falling under the romance genre. These guidelines include a developing romantic relationship between two individuals, a problem that creates conflict and tension between them and a resolution in which the problem is solved ending with the couple being reunited. Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre features many of these characteristics. The romance though wouldn't have been the same if the main character Jane wasn’t who she was. From certain characters to plot moments, Jane wouldn’t have been the person she was at the end of the story, a woman in love with a man. In Elizabeth Imlay’s , Charlotte Brontë and the Mysteries of Love: Myth and Allegory in Jane Eyre she …show more content…

Jane strives for such things as freedom, love, social equality, education, and spiritual wholeness throughout the novel. In the beginning, when Jane is at Lowood School, she struggles to find spiritual wholeness. Jane comes across several models of religion, beginning with Helen Burns and Mr. Brocklehurst, and later on, St. John Rivers. Jane rejects Helen’s meek and passive interpretation of Christianity, Mr. Brocklehurst’s hypocritical and humiliating mode of Christianity, and St. John’s ambitious, self-righteous form of Christianity. Jane also searches not just for romantic love, but also for a sense of being valued, of belonging. ElizabethTowards the beginning of the novel, Jane she says to Helen, “to gain some real affection from you, or Miss Temple, or any other whom I truly love, I would willingly submit to have the bone of my arm broken, or to let a bull toss me, or to stand behind a kicking horse, and let it dash its hoof at my chest”(Brontë 59). Jane eventually finds both love and social class equality when she marries Mr. Rochester after he is blinded in the fire. She feels as though she is now his equal and their roles are no longer in place. This struggle to attain an ideal is evidence of the romantic

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