Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Jane Eyre
View through CrossRef
Gentle reader, may you never feel what I then felt!’ Throughout the hardships of her childhood - spent with a severe aunt and abusive cousin, and later at the austere Lowood charity school - Jane Eyre clings to a sense of self-worth, despite of her treatment from those close to her. At the age of eighteen, sick of her narrow existence, she seeks work as a governess. The monotony of Jane’s new life at Thornfield Hall is broken up by the arrival of her peculiar and changeful employer, Mr Rochester. Routine at the mansion is further disrupted by mysterious incidents that draw the pair closer together but which, once explained, threaten Jane’s happiness and integrity. A flagship of Victorian fiction, Jane Eyre draws the reader in by the vigour of Jane’s voice and the novel’s forceful depiction of childhood injustice, of the restraints placed upon women, and the complexities of both faith and passion. The emotional charge of Jane’s story is as strong today as it was more than 150 years ago, as she seeks dignity and freedom on her own terms. In this new edition, Juliette Atkinson explores the power of narrative voice and looks at the striking physicality of the novel, which is both shocking and romantic.
Title: Jane Eyre
Description:
Gentle reader, may you never feel what I then felt!’ Throughout the hardships of her childhood - spent with a severe aunt and abusive cousin, and later at the austere Lowood charity school - Jane Eyre clings to a sense of self-worth, despite of her treatment from those close to her.
At the age of eighteen, sick of her narrow existence, she seeks work as a governess.
The monotony of Jane’s new life at Thornfield Hall is broken up by the arrival of her peculiar and changeful employer, Mr Rochester.
Routine at the mansion is further disrupted by mysterious incidents that draw the pair closer together but which, once explained, threaten Jane’s happiness and integrity.
A flagship of Victorian fiction, Jane Eyre draws the reader in by the vigour of Jane’s voice and the novel’s forceful depiction of childhood injustice, of the restraints placed upon women, and the complexities of both faith and passion.
The emotional charge of Jane’s story is as strong today as it was more than 150 years ago, as she seeks dignity and freedom on her own terms.
In this new edition, Juliette Atkinson explores the power of narrative voice and looks at the striking physicality of the novel, which is both shocking and romantic.
Related Results
Poetic Disillusionment and Immortal Struggles: A Comparative Study of Lin Daiyu and Jane Eyre
Poetic Disillusionment and Immortal Struggles: A Comparative Study of Lin Daiyu and Jane Eyre
Abstract: Lin Daiyu and Jane Eyre are both well-known characters in world literature. Though they are created by writers from different cultures in different times, many studies ha...
Jane Eyre: "Hazarding Confidences"
Jane Eyre: "Hazarding Confidences"
This essay argues that Jane Eyre (1847) is an elaborate confidence game in which Rochester takes Jane into his confidence in order to lie to her and that Jane responds by first mas...
The ethics of appropriation; or, the ‘mere spectre’ of Jane Eyre: Emma Tennant’s Thornfield Hall, Jasper Fforde’s The Eyre Affair and Gail Jones’s Sixty Lights
The ethics of appropriation; or, the ‘mere spectre’ of Jane Eyre: Emma Tennant’s Thornfield Hall, Jasper Fforde’s The Eyre Affair and Gail Jones’s Sixty Lights
This chapter explores the ethics of neo-Victorian appropriation through close analyses of three Brontëan afterlives: novels by Emma Tennant (Thornfield Hall), Jasper Fforde (The Ey...
JANE AMAVA HELEN QUE NÃO SABIA BEM SE AMAVA JANE QUE TAMBÉM AMAVA BLANCHE: HETEROSSEXUALIDADE COMPULSÓRIA EM UMA LEITURA QUEER DE JANE EYRE DE CHARLOTTE BRONTË
JANE AMAVA HELEN QUE NÃO SABIA BEM SE AMAVA JANE QUE TAMBÉM AMAVA BLANCHE: HETEROSSEXUALIDADE COMPULSÓRIA EM UMA LEITURA QUEER DE JANE EYRE DE CHARLOTTE BRONTË
Desde a sua publicação, Jane Eyre, romance de estreia de Charlotte Brontë, tem sido estudado e analisado de várias perspectivas. Entretanto, considerando que poucos trabalhos no Br...
The Rosamond Plots
The Rosamond Plots
Abstract
In both Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre (1847) and George Eliot’s Middlemarch (1871–72) an earnest and ambitious man falls in love with a superficial and beaut...
Jane Eyre and Wide Sargasso Sea’s Treatment of Feminism and its Reflection in Character Analysis
Jane Eyre and Wide Sargasso Sea’s Treatment of Feminism and its Reflection in Character Analysis
“Jane Eyre” and “Wide Sargasso Sea” are regarded as the masterpieces that vividly express theelements of feminism. Before analyzing and proving this idea,it is necessary to determi...
Jane Eyre y Antoinette Cosway: Emancipación femenina y transculturación de identidades
Jane Eyre y Antoinette Cosway: Emancipación femenina y transculturación de identidades
Nos proponemos realizar un estudio comparado de Jane Eyre y Ancho mar de los sargazos, escritas ambas por mujeres, pero de contextos y épocas diferentes. Postulamos que Jane Eyre, ...
Alice Munro and Charlotte Brontë
Alice Munro and Charlotte Brontë
It has become conventional to recognize in Jane Eyre a consistent pattern of doubling and displacement: specifically to see Bertha Rochester as acting out the narrator’s own anger ...

