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Jane Eyre: Ambiguities of Equality, Servitude and Independence

Good Essays

Terry Eagleton states the "Jane 's relationship with Rochester is marked by ambiguities of equality, servitude, and independence". By examining pertinent incidents in the text, the validity of this statement will be shown, and moreover, these ambiguities will be shown to be of Jane 's own doing. It will be shown that she is the one who constantly thinks herself to be inferior, and even when she is said to be Rochester 's equal, she thinks of some way in which she is inadequate, in order to sabotage her own happiness. While there are ambiguities of servitude and independence, it is the issue of equality that is most important in the novel, because both Jane 's fears of servitude, and a loss of independence, are linked to the fact that …show more content…

She can only see Rochester as someone who is socially, and financially superior, and as because she lived in the Victorian period, she feels inferior because she is a woman. As far as Christian morals are concerned, Jane is superior to Rochester because she refuses to marry him, and pursue her on happiness, because he is still married to Bertha Mason. She says the "[t]he more solitary, the more friendless, the more unsustained [she is], the more [she] will respect [herself]" (p.447). This attempt to "keep the laws given by God" (p.447) may seem noble but the language that she uses alludes to the fact that she is trying to sabotage her happiness. While Jane is of a lower social standing than Rochester, she will not allow Rochester to raise her up to his social class. When he refers to her as "Jane Rochester" (p.363) she feels "smote and stunned: it was, [she thinks], almost fear" (p.363). When Rochester says the he will adorn Jane with jewels, to make her look like nobility, she refuses and once again reverts to a position of subservience and inferiority, telling Rochester that "[she is his] plain, Quakerish governess" (p.364). She feels this was even though Rochester later tells her that "[she] mutinied against fate, and claimed [her] rank as [his] equal" (p.369) Jane feels financially inferior to Rochester, even though in marrying

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