"Jane Eyre" by Charlotte Bronte - notes and imagery of each chapter, how they compare and Bronte's use of laguage.
Title: "Jane Eyre" by Charlotte Bronte - notes and imagery of each chapter, how they compare and Bronte's use of laguage.
Category: /Arts & Humanities/Artists
Details: Words: 27039 | Pages: 98 (approximately 235 words/page)
"Jane Eyre" by Charlotte Bronte - notes and imagery of each chapter, how they compare and Bronte's use of laguage.
Category: /Arts & Humanities/Artists
Details: Words: 27039 | Pages: 98 (approximately 235 words/page)
At the time, literary society in England was a very small
world. For a complete unknown to publish a successful novel was
relatively unusual. For three unknowns to manage it in a single
year was unheard of. Naturally, everyone was curious about
them, though normally the curiosity would have died down as soon
as a new subject for gossip came along. But an aura of mystery
surrounding the identity of the Brontes kept them a
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Jane, in destroying the dark passion of her own psyche, has
become truly her "own mistress."
-Elaine Showalter, A Literature of Their Own
And finally, in defense of Bronte's "unrestrained" style:
On the first page of Jane Eyre the first issue raised is in fact
the issue of style. The wrong style, in girlhood and in
language, is the reason why Jane is kept by Mrs. Reed from
joining the other children around the fire.