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Marxist Perspective In Jane Eyre

Decent Essays

In the passage selected, Charlotte Bronte draws on Gothic influences, which was in vogue during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century, to create an atmosphere of intense fear, highlighting the deeply uncomfortable victimisation of a young child. Bronte depicts Jane’s fear through ideas of supernatural, class and slavery in order to show the unfair treatment of her protagonist by her oppressors, due to her class, status and gender.

Bronte’s narrator, Jane Eyre, narrates the passage from a position of hindsight, making her the typical, rational, Gothic narrator, leading the reader to trust Jane and the actions being described. The gothic tropes utilised lend to a Marxist reading of the novel; the terrified Jane is the symbol of the oppressed proletariat victimised by the bourgeoisie. Through the use of fear, incarceration and uncertainty, created by the gothic devices, the reader is encouraged to feel empathetic towards Jane, as she is unlawfully victimised for her cousin’s “violent actions”. A Marxist reading can be applied to the entirety of the novel, as Bronte explores the strange trapped position Jane occupies within a hierarchical class system, oppressed by the upper classes (John Reed, Mr Brocklehurst) yet, not quite a member of the servant classes either. Bronte is exploring the changing class system in 19th century England and questioning the corruption and bullying behaviour of the upper classes, hence Jane’s narrative is a critique of the upper classes and their dubious moral values.

The oppressive nature of the upper class can again be seen when Jane is incarcerated in the “red-room” and “overshadowed” by “walls”. The forced incarceration is, although real to Jane and the plot, used as a metaphor by Bronte, in relation to class. The past participle of the verb ‘overshadow’ creates an atmosphere of oppression. As Jane is entirely passive in this encounter, the reader can clearly witness that she is the victim, again, aiding the marxist reading of ‘Jane Eyre’. The repetition of the verb “oppressed”, solidifies the notion that Jane is being suffocated by the tyrannical rule of her aunt Mrs Reed. Furthermore, Bronte draws on the language of slavery to further emphasise the oppression

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