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Jane Eyre Patriarchy

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Analyze Brontë’s account of female experience in Jane Eyre

The character of Jane Eyre refuses to blend into the traditional female position of subservience expected of the period. Although there had been Bildungsromans before ‘Jane Eyre’, as the first one told entirely by a female narrator, by its very nature, the novel could not help intersecting with every aspect of femininity of the 19th century, and as the novel repeatedly demonstrates, how intrusive and overbearing highly controlled patriarchy can go; “women are supposed to be very calm generally; but women feel just as men feel; they need exercise for their faculties, and a field for their efforts as much as their brothers do; they suffer from too rigid a restraint… precisely as men …show more content…

Despite John Reed’s cruel, brutish behaviour towards Jane; ‘you are a dependant… you ought to beg’, Jane’s innately fierce nature is not crushed, it merely lies in wait, cloaked by her ‘habitual obedience’, until it is gradually revealed as she fights back against Mrs Reed’s tyranny. When being forced into the Red Room, as punishment for a crime she did not commit, Jane tells the reader that ‘I resisted all the way: a new thing for me’, it is arguably the first break in the traditional mould for a female heroine, as he does not, and increasingly will not, fit the female roles conventionally assigned to a woman in her position in society. When Mrs Reed cruelly asserts to John Reed that Jane is “not worthy of notice… neither you or your sister should associate with her”, Jane’s reaction is not orthodoxly submissive, but instinctively and immediately reactive. To defend herself she vehemently states “I cried out suddenly and without at all deliberating on my words ‘they are not fit to associate with me!’”. Jane’s confidence and quick wit, moves her further away from conventionality and submission, and fuels her independent, morally virtuous personality. Later, when Mrs Reed denounces Jane’s character to her future headmaster ‘the cold marble pillar’, Mr Brocklehurst, Jane again, passionately discards the expectations placed upon her, and informs the reader, “speak I must: I had been …show more content…

She is described as indistinguishable from either ‘beast or human being’, her mannerisms both gothic and animalistic, ‘it snatched and growled…gazed wildly at her visitors’. Jane’s use of the pronoun ‘it’, heightens the sense of otherworldliness surrounding her appearance and simultaneously adds to Jane’s confusion concerning Bertha’s indeterminable form. This removal from the canny and the normal, when encountering Bertha adds to the heightened sense of Gothicism which runs throughout the novel. Importantly, especially when reading Jane Eyre within a feminist framework, Bertha is described as ‘a big woman, in stature almost equalling her husband’, compared to Jane who is often described, by Rochester, as a ‘fairy’. Implies a significant difference between the self-contained, neat and puritanical Jane, and the aggressive, overbearing Bertha, who is both mentally ill and a physical match for her husband, whereas Jane’s small ‘bird-like’ figure figure implies

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