Jane Eyre
by Charlotte Brontë
Genre: Gothic fiction, bildungsroman
First Published 1847
Bantam Classics Edition 2003
Number of Pages (this edition): 493
Setting: England, early to mid 1800s
Storyline: One of my all-time favorite novels follows its spirited title character throughout different stages of her life. From a cruel, oppressive childhood as an unwelcome resident of her aunt and cousins home, Jane is sent to Lowood School for an education, and experiences privations in the name of charity as well as finding new role models. Later on she takes a post as governess at Thornfield Hall, where she finds a place in the small household and eventually falls in love with her employer, Mr. Rochester. In a dramatic turn of events testing her morals and resilience, Jane flees Thornfield and finds shelter and a second family with St. John Rivers and his two sisters. During her long absence Jane learns of a reversal of her fortunes that prompts her to return to Thornfield and Mr. Rochester.
Themes: Love at odds with autonomy, gender relations, criticism of social hierarchy and the status quo, morality, passion, feminism
Read-a-likes:
North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell
The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins
Persuasion by Jane Austen
Monday, January 27, 2014
Sunday, January 26, 2014
Introductory Remarks
Hello! I'm Mary Alice and this is my blog for the S524 - Readers' Advisory class. My blog title stems from the fact that I am a night owl, and tend to read by nightlight to trick myself into falling asleep, which rarely happens!
I have always intended to start a blog, so I'm hoping with this class I will get into the habit and actually start posting oddball musings and other writings I have been working on the past few years. Allons-y!
I have always intended to start a blog, so I'm hoping with this class I will get into the habit and actually start posting oddball musings and other writings I have been working on the past few years. Allons-y!
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