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Conformity In Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre

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Novels are necessarily demonstrative as they give form to a world totally at the author’s disposal not to assert his point but to display it and thus memorable, relatable, and complex books reinforce the author’s point through every action or thought of the main character allowing their meanings and implications to transgress their temporal restrictions. Charlotte Brontë successfully escapes the fetters of her historical period in Jane Eyre which provides meaningful and dense passages that illuminate Jane’s character through her description, analysis, and interaction with her environment, constantly pushing Jane’s inner conflict to the foreground, making her stream of consciousness the constant that unifies the whole work. The feud between …show more content…

This intense pressure is only magnified from the perspective of the oppressed and lost youths who seek comfort far away from society in order to be themselves. Jane and Holden develop a disdain for etiquette after reprobation from Holden’s teachers and verbal abuse against Jane that was intended “to dismiss her or her ideas and thereby transform her into something non-threatening” (Peters 61). As “intruder[s] from the outside” (Peters 61) Jane and Holden are driven to find their own paths. Their journeys to adulthood are encumbered by illusions of a pure romance or a life without a designated role and are only completed when they can reconcile their ideals with reality or atone for mistakes caused by these delusions. Once Jane is no longer preoccupied with “her need to validate herself”(Block 216) and assert her independence she can forgive the people who harmed her in the past and recognize and respect the varying perspectives of others. Holden breaks free of his “rejection of an adult role” by accepting responsibility for his immoral actions after leaving school and the effect it had on his younger sister Phoebe thus facing the “successful [adult] life he fears” (Rosen 101). The message of each book on the necessity of a partial concession of liberties for the sake of conforming to the demands of responsibility shows a gradual and complex development in the main characters that is ripe for

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