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The Power Of Women In Jane Eyre

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The Color Purple, Wide Sargasso Sea and The Handmaid’s Tale explores the concept of the power of women and gender roles submerged in a patriarchal atmosphere. These iconic novels include themes found in one of Charlotte Bronte’s most successful novels Jane Eyre. Bronte illuminates the themes of women’s power, gender roles and religion throughout the novel with dialogue between characters and the most interesting, placing them at the end of the chapter. Instead of a happily ever after story for Jane, Bronte creates the most perplexing conclusion to Jane’s narrative with a somber passage regarding her long-lost cousin St. John. In “Jane’s Crown of Thorns; feminism and Christianity in Jane Eyre”, writer Maria Lamonaca successfully argues that the emphasis and focus on St.John’s death represents how religion is one of the main perpetrators for women’s inferiority in society. Brontë concludes the novel with a sinister yet peaceful passage of the death of St. John. St. John was a character that represented the “Christian worldview” of “masculine self-aggrandizement and domination”, a common theme seen throughout the novel that manifested in other characters such as Mr. Brocklehurst and Rochester (Lamonaca). This theme of male domination was found mostly in the Victorian era, the time of Brontë’s creation of this romance novel. Brontë illuminates this Christian male superiority with St. John’s death towering over Jane’s ending with Rochester through the use of anaphora for

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