Friday, November 15, 2019
The Oppressed Female in Charlotte Brontes Jane Eyre Essay -- Jane Eyr
The Oppressed Female in Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre        à  Ã  Ã  Ã   In Jane Eyre, Charlotte  Brontà « clearly demonstrates the relationship between sexuality and morality in  Victorian society through the character of Bertha Mason, the daughter of a West  Indian planter and Rochester's first wife. Rochester recklessly married Bertha  in his youth, and when it was discovered shortly after the marriage that Bertha  was sexually promiscuous, Rochester locked her away. Bertha is called a "maniac"  and is characterized as insane. Confining Bertha for her display of excess  passion reinforces a prevalent theme in Jane Eyre, that of oppressive sexual  Victorian values. Bertha's captivity metaphorically speaks on the male-dominated  Victorian society in which women are inferior and scorned for acts of  nonconformism.      à       For the first half of Jane Eyre, Bertha is only known to the reader through  her nearly phantasmal presence&emdash;the peculiar laugh, and the mysterious  incident in which Rochester's bed was lit on fire. Only after the foiled wedding  of Rochester and Jane, in which Mr. Briggs and Mr. Mason appear unexpectedly  declaring that the wedding should not proceed, does Rochester explain to Jane  that he has a living wife detained on the third floor of Thornfield Hall. "He  lifted the hangings from the wall, uncovering the second door: this, too, he  opened" (327). "In a room without a window" Bertha is found living as a wild  animal sequestered from everyone but her caretaker Grace Poole. Like a ferocious  beast, she is even tied down and bound.      à       Throughout the novel there are similar images of the restrained female, an  example being Jane's detention in the "red-room" at Gateshead Hall. Both Jane  and Bertha were ...              ...otypical woman of the  Victorian era who courteously and obediently allowed herself to be dominated by  males. Through the depictions of the incarcerated female, Brontà « speaks on the  ills of an unjust society. Brontà «'s representation of Bertha as a wild, chained,  and trapped animal and the symbolic use of fire reflect the difficulties women  had in expressing their sexuality in an era in which men dominated and in which  women played the role of the obedient, confined, and inferior being.     à       Works Cited and Consulted:     Brontà «, Charlotte.à   Jane Eyre.à   New York, Penguin Books, 1997.     Gates, Barbara Timm, ed. Critical Essays on Charlotte Bronte. Boston: G. K.  Hall, 1990.     Okin, Susan Moller.à   Justice, Gender and the Family.à   United States  of America: Basic Books, 1989.     Wollstonecraft, Mary.à   The Rights of Women.à   Everyman's Library  Edition.     à                        
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