Role Of Governess

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The idea of governess extended until the nineteenth century. The Victorian women especially the Bronte sisters, Charlotte and Anne, experienced the occupation of a governess. Their impressions were negative because of the poor condition, bad treatment, and low wage of a governess during the Victorian era. According to Gilbert, Anne endured in the governess’s job for six years while Charlotte shortened it to two years. Charlotte wrote in a letter to her sister Emily, “I can now see more clearly than I have ever done before that a private governess has no existence, is not considered as a living and rational being, except as connected with the wearisome duties she has to fulfill”(qtd. in Heyck, 203). Charlotte transfers her negative views of …show more content…

Brocklehurst who is the headmaster of Lowood School keeps the girls hungry and cold. Also, he treats the girls very badly by punishing them. One of the problems that children from working and middle class face in schools, rather than the social distinction, is the physical punishment. In “Aspects of Neglect: The Strange Case of Victorian Popular Education,” Harold Silver investigates about the “corporal punishment” that is used in English schools. In his research, he claims “historians have assumed that physical punishment was the rule in the elementary schoolـــbecause it was the rule in the grammar and public school”(63). He argues that there is no accurate statistic about how much the physical punishment is used in poor and middle schools. Teachers in the English schools thought that the corporal punishment was a useful way to educate and instruct children. According to Victorian Children, teachers used several kinds of punishment for students who were lazy or naughty in classrooms by beating the boys by canes on their backsides while they punished girls on hands or legs. Teachers also punished students who were slow at their lessons by wearing the ashamed dance’s hat and sitting in a corner for an …show more content…

Through Jane Eyre, Charlotte shows the reality of a governess’s job that makes a governess’s life miserable. However, the Bronte sisters started to establish their own private school in order to provide a good environment and formal education for girls. Unfortunately, their project failed because they had no financial or governmental support that might help them to run their school. After that, all the Bronte sisters, as well as Jane Austen, transfers all their efforts in writing literary works that criticized several issues, especially the educational system of England. These literary works help to show British people’s suffering from class distinction, especially females who become inferior and have unequal positions in English society in the eighteenth century. This leads some political party to perform an act that supports the idea of equality between classes and males and females, especially in

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