In the classic novel Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte tells the story of a young orphan who struggles through life until she overcomes her class and marries the man of her dreams. Bronte weaves together a story that shows the inner struggle of the main character beautifully. One of the main themes of the story is love versus autonomy, and which one will overcome the other in the end. Jane comes to a crossroad where she must make the choice between her own independence or living out her days with Rochester. The theme love versus autonomy is extremely important to the novel Jane Eyre because Jane is forced to choose between the two.
Jane has never experienced love from another person. Because of the animosity between Jane and her aunt, she arrives
In the novel Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte, the heroine is portrayed as a neglected individual who desperately wishes to learn the skill of escaping the imprisonment of the troubled mind. Literary critic Nina Baym claims that Jane’s goal is to assert her dominance rather than to gain independence. However, in several parts of the novel, Jane is vocal about her desire to make it on her own without the assistance of money, love, or affection. She would rather be freed of any restraints that may hold her hostage than dominate the life of another.
My journey starts long ago in of Egypt around 100 B.C.E. I’m a very skilled Iron worker. Actually one of the best among the people. I’ve decide that I would takes my skills to the China and being among the people of the Qui dynasty. It wasn’t easy journey it toke nines year for me to reach china. When I get there it’s a totally new world. It’s cooler, moist and felled with lust forest. The animals, trees and even the people look totally different. As I walk along on a stone road I’m confronted by old man. His name his says is Zha Shen. Luckily along my travels on my camel I was able to pick up the language along going further into china. He says “you aren’t around from around here I see, your darker than us and wear odd clothing and have brought weird tools we have never seen what brings you go the Qui Dynasty land.
Charlotte Bronte’s piece Jane Eyre depicts the struggle for independence from an oppressive and dominant
Jane was not only resented but also lacking any kind of love to balance her out. We know this right away when she is reading her book and she notes "there were certain introductory pages I could not pass quite as a blank. They were
Jane’s approach could be considered romantic and embodies conventional feminist concepts; she remains headstrong and stubborn in the face of injustice. The representation of Jane as a strong, independent woman upholds the belief that woman can achieve their goals. Jane does precisely this; she marries Rochester, becomes a part of a family as well as gains financial independence. The way in which Bronte represents Jane is emphasized through her narrative stance. The reader is presented with a firm and rebellious character, her diction is simple and assertive. She addresses the reader directly and is able to identify and challenge the problems she faces with determination. Furthermore Jane is able to identify and comment on how she feels woman are subjugated by their society; she denounces that “woman are supposed to be very calm generally: but woman feel just as men feel […]” (Bronte
In Jane Eyre, by Charlotte Bronte, Bronte tells a story about a girl coming of age trying to find love, while also dealing with the struggles of the Victorian era. In the text, Bronte challenges the idea of whether our lives are controlled by our own ability to choose what happens or if what happens in our lives is out of our own control.
“...I desired liberty; for liberty I gasped…”(Bronte xxvi). Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte and The Language of Flowers by Vanessa Diffenbaugh are portraying to the readers, that themes are unchanging despite the fact that literature is reshaping by applying liberty as one of them. Jane Eyre, a classic and The Language of Flowers, a modern novel convey related and similar themes that are represented throughout the book. From the beginning, we discover that the two leading characters in the novels strive for independence that they have been seeking for a long time. Both, Jane Eyre a young girl who lived as an orphan to an unloving home and Victoria Jones a youthful woman whose young life had been spent in foster care, desire independence like they never had before. With love, family, independence, forgiveness, and mistrust that the novels, Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte and The Language of Flowers by Vanessa Diffenbaugh convey have expressed that literature may change day by day but themes won't.
In the novel by Charlotte Bronte, "Jane Eyre", there is a constant battle of love versus autonomy in Jane, the main character. At points Jane feels as if she would give anything to be loved. Yet over the course of the book Jane needs to learn how to gain affection of others without sacrificing something in return.
“I am no bird and no net ensnares me; I am a free human being with an independent will” (Bronte, Jane Eyre 293). In the Victorian time period Charlotte Bronte lived the unequal life as a woman, like many others. The only difference is Bronte did not believe in living in inequality, and she wrote about her hardships in her literature. In her book, Jane Eyre, the reader can see many similarities in her main character’s life and her own. Jane Eyre has many ways of showing how Victorian women were expected to be and act, included in the life of Jane. Bronte also continues her portrayal of the inequality of women and the decision of love versus autonomy through two of her poems, “Life” and “The Wife’s Will.” Charlotte Bronte displays the inequality in life of women in the Victorian era by taking her life and revitalizing it into themes of her works, by providing a journey of discovery of love or autonomy.
Through the Victorian Age, male dominance deprived women from a certain freedom. In Charlotte Brontë’s novel, Jane Eyre, Jane Eyre repeatedly struggles to become an independent young lady due to the troublesome men in the story. John Reed controls Jane, Mr. Brocklehurst humiliates Jane, and Mr. Rochester sees women, in general, as objects. The author manages to depict patriarchal dominance through the characterization of John Reed, Mr. Brocklehurst, and Mr. Rochester.
Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre displays cases of physical and social restriction, along with instances of avant-garde emotional freedom in terms of Jane Eyre’s freedom of choice in leaving Mr Rochester and rejecting St John River’s proposal.
Charlotte Bronte’s novel Jane Eyre embraces many feminist views in opposition to the Victorian feminine ideal. Charlotte Bronte herself was among the first feminist writers of her time, and wrote this book in order to send the message of feminism to a Victorian-Age Society in which women were looked upon as inferior and repressed by the society in which they lived. This novel embodies the ideology of equality between a man and woman in marriage, as well as in society at large. As a feminist writer, Charlotte Bronte created this novel to support and spread the idea of an independent woman who works for herself, thinks for herself, and acts of her own accord.
Parallel to many of the great feministic novels throughout literary history, Jane Eyre is a story about the quest for authentic love. However, Jane Eyre is unique and separate from other romantic pieces, in that it is also about a woman searching for a sense of self-worth through achieving a degree of independence. Orphaned and dismissed at an early age, Jane was born into a modest lifestyle that was characterized by a form of oppressive servitude of which she had no autonomy. She was busy spending much of her adolescent years locked in chains, both imaginary and real, as well as catering to the needs of her peers. Jane was never being able to enjoy the pleasures and joys that an ordinary and independent child values. Jane struggles
“I am no bird; and no net ensnares me: I am a free human being with an independent will; which I now exert to leave you”(257-258). The quote epitomizes Jane’s independence, but underneath Jane’s strong exterior, she is a young woman longing for love and a family. Throughout the novel, Jane learns to fend for herself, but we also see Jane’s longing for a family. In Charlotte Bronte’s book Jane Eyre, themes of family, love, and independence prominently play out in the characters of Jane, Rochester, and St. John.
In the novel, Jane Eyre, the author Charlotte Brontë’s real life experiences influence the novel heavily throughout. Some of Brontë’s life events are paralleled through the novel and are morphed to fit the main character, Jane Eyre, with a similar but better life compared to Brontë’s. There are three major experiences that Jane encounters through her life in the novel that have a few correlations with Charlotte Brontë’s which are their childhood life and her experience in an impoverished school, and her work as a governess.