Many famous authors throughout history received inspiration from their life experiences, and Emily Bronte was one of them. For the majority of Bronte’s life, people considered her different and treated her as an outcast. Feeling insecure, she became very attached to her family and home. Bronte’s writing comes from a private place influenced by her harsh upbringing giving reason as to why her writing style was heavily gothic with romance. This also helped develop her vivid imagination that is reflected in the description and imagery of her work. Bronte was born on July 30th, 1818 to the parents of Reverend Patrick and Maria Bronte, who lived in Market Street, Thornton. She was the fifth of six children in a family that struggled financially. Their family lived off one income and when her father was offered a better job with benefits they moved to …show more content…
Not long after the family moved, Maria Bronte passed away. Maria’s sister, Elizabeth Branwell, took up the role as the mother of the household and instilled many rules making the children well disciplined. The women in this household were not confined to household duties, but were able to read and have access to literature which inspired their imaginative works. The Clergy Daughters’ School in Cowan Bridge, was where the oldest of the four Bronte children started their formal education. The conditions of the school were atrocious and many students were sent back to their homes due to illness. Of these students, Elizabeth and Maria Bronte both got Tuberculosis and died within a short period of each other. After this tragedy, the remaining children started their education back up in the comfort of their own home. The learning style of the house was focused around using your imagination. Emily and Anne did this together by creating Gondal, a
Through her trials and tribulations, Charlotte Bronte has kept her passion for poetry alive and remains as one of the most influential British poets of all times. Even though she is one of the most famous female writers of all times, she is mostly famous for her most popular novel Jane Eyre. Charlotte Bronte has experienced more tragedy in her life than happiness by losing her mother and all five of her siblings. But, in her moments of tragedy, she expressed her feelings through poetry. As a result, Charlotte’s experience as a poet has not only shown her creativity, but it has proven that you can still be the best through hard times and stress.
Charlotte Brontë’s works were greatly influenced by her life, which was riddled with trouble and loss. The passing of her mother, and later, her two eldest sisters, deeply marked her. The loss Charlotte experienced was represented in Jane Eyre, where the main character leads a childhood similar to Brontë’s. The isolation she was raised in also played a role in her writing, this because her and her siblings were only able to communicate with each other, causing her and her sister’s writing styles to be very similar. These similarities led to the public thinking that many of the separate sisters’ works to be written by only one person. Another factor that influenced Brontë’s writing was the change of career- shifting from writing poetry to writing novels. Brontë, in her early years, experimented with forms of poetry that were characteristic of the Victorian period, but soon settled into her own signature style of writing.
The Bronte children’s writing experience began in 1826, when they together wrote a series of plays featuring a fantasy land entitled Angria. Although Branwell and Charlotte grew out of these plays, Emily and Anne continued such fantasies well into adulthood, many of which they titled the Gondal Chronicles. Many of these fantasies became the subjects of Bronte’s poems, and the experience she gained from them prepared her for a stand-alone a
At the time of 19th century England, the societal norms of women were very different from today. It is against the norm for women to get an education and to have a job outside of the house. Bronte allows the reader to follow the journey of Jane Eyre’s struggle of getting a good education and finding a job. As Brontë introduces Jane, the reader learns that she will be attending school of Lowood soon, as a way for her stepmother to get rid of her. Young Jane is thrilled at the idea of going to school and sets her hopes high.
Bronte was two years old when her mother Maria Bronte. I was 8 years old when my father, Joel Sanders passed away. Emily was the fifth child to her parents. I am the third child of my parents.
Charlotte Bronte’s “Jane Eyre” has captivated readers for generations. As with all coming of age novels, young adults can relate to the struggles and triumphs of Jane. Jane’s setting influences and parallel her emotions. A reader can see the novel through her eyes and perspective. In Bronte’s “Jane Eyre,” the location often parallels Jane’s emotional growth through the tone presented by the environment, resulting in the different places she lives revealing her journey through depression. Jane’s behavioral patterns and thoughts suggest clinical depression that affected her choices throughout the novel and her life at Gateshead, Lowood, Thornfield, Marsh End, and Ferdean.
In its simplest form, Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre tells the story of a young woman, Jane Eyre, who grows up poor, makes the decision to be independent, does so, and, eventually, marries rich. The novel follows her from her childhood to her reunion with the love of her life and she, throughout it, deals with classism and sexism and exhibits her own form of feminism. By the end, it becomes clear that, with this semi-autobiographical novel, Charlotte Bronte was providing a criticism on society’s discrimination toward those of a lower class, a subtle argument against the male-dominated society’s treatment of women, and an even subtler call to action for women to find their own agency outside of the men in their lives. On another end, however,
To start, Charlotte Bronte experienced many hardships from a young age, and rather than letting them hinder her, she grew from them. Bronte experienced loss at a young age, losing her mother and two of her sisters, and she illustrated almost the exact same loss through Jane and Helen at Lowood (Bock). She effectively portrays her life’s setbacks through her works in which we can see many of her misfortunes paraphrased into Jane’s own. In Jane Eyre, Jane was sent to the school, Lowood, where they believe in “plain fare, simple attire, unsophisticated accommodations, (and) hardy and active habits” to teach young girls how to conform to society’s views (Bronte 42). Charlotte Bronte herself was sent to Cowan Bridge to learn how to present herself in any situation a lady may come to, and the school basically taught women how to become governesses and teachers because that’s all they could be, much like in the book (Bock). Bronte went through tough times in her life, but readers know how well she used those tough times to influence her work and end up finding a will to live through her writing. For example, in “The Wife’s Will” when the wife is talking about her hard times, making her cry, she states how the tears never lasted that long with the help of her husband (Bronte). This can be taken as a poem Bronte wrote
Did Charlotte Brontë know, upon penning the book which was to be her first publication, that she was creating a work to be heralded as one of the most outstanding romance novels ever written? No, for there was no feasible way for her to hold such knowledge, yet Jane Eyre is nevertheless viewed now, by almost all who have read it, as an incontestable classic and a masterpiece of undeniable talent. Jane Eyre, the turbulent tale of a rejected orphan girl and her search to find love, is not merely a novel to further happy frivolity, for, despite the fact that it falls into the romance category, the content of Brontë's work anything but a sappy dream. On the contrary, Jane Eyre does not shy away from the substantial themes of faith,
RD1: Biography and Cultural Influences Tall, slim, lanky Emily Brontë; with eyes that can strike with passion. Bront¬¬¬¬¬¬¬ë can be recognized as an individual poet or as one of the three Brontë sisters. Life at the Brontë home was strange and unhappy due to many family deaths, including their mother’s death by cancer. In their isolation and vast imagination, the remaining siblings made up fictional stories.
Feminists like Charlotte Bronte, fight for equality emotionally, mentally, financially, and physically. When Charlotte was 5 her mother passed away, and therefore the loss of a mother became the theme in her books. Then at age eight her father sent her and her sisters to The Clergy Daughters’ School which was expressed as Lowood School in “Jane Eyre”. Also just like Helen Burns in “Jane Eyre”, her older sisters Maria and Elizabeth died of tuberculosis. When Bronte was twenty six she enrolled in a school to learn French. It was in this time when she created “Jane Eyre”, in which she poured out her passion for her married teacher, creating the character Mr. Rochester. While writing “Jane Eyre” Charlotte discovered that Arthur Bell Nicholls, one of her father’s workers, had fallen in love with her, but she did not reciprocate these feelings. The two
Taking a leadership role amongst Charlotte’s siblings after the death of their mother, Charlotte saw her sister much in the way Jane perceived Helen; beautiful and angelic, yet frustratingly unobtainable. Maria was well read and beginning to show a passion for literature by age six, something Charlotte greatly looked up. Maria is cited as first introducing Charlotte to reading novels as well as first inspiring her to being writing her own. Tragically, Maria died, after having contracted tuberculosis while she and her sisters were away at Cowan’s Bridge boarding school. (Charlotte Bronte 158) This event shook young Charlotte, only nine years old at the time, and losing her second “parent.” (Her father was still alive, but he not play an active role in the children’s lives, especially while they were away at school.) She became forced to take the motherly role of her sister and protect her other siblings as well as teach them. (Charlotte Bronte 159) Her untimely demise, as well as her motherly role, influenced Jane’s creation of the character of Helen Burns, who shared both of those defining characteristics. Helen’s extreme faith, while not completely linked to Charlotte’s sister, is believed to stem from a combination of Charlotte seeing her sister as a martyr, dying to save her sisters from the suffering that was their boarding school, and the idealization
Even though Jane was a poor orphan through her teenage years, she decided to pursue a career in education despite the traditional view. Society’s view of what Jane’s role should have been is quite different from reality. She proved her point by growing as a young adult and being independent through choices in her life. Bronte brought attention to the injustice women were facing by portraying Jane to make her decision as to which career she was choosing to pursue and the path her life was
Charlotte Bronte, born in 1816 at Thornton, Yorkshire, England, is an English writer who is one of three sisters, who are also famous for their writings. Bronte wrote Jane Eyre based on her own life experiences, which is why the novel is subtitled “An Autobiography”. Much of the romantic appeal in Jane Eyre comes from Bronte’s own personal history. Many critics argue that the novel is simply a reflection of Bronte’s life. Furthermore, there are several ways in which, Bronte’s life is similar to the life of Jane and the events that take place in the novel.
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.