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    Themes in Jane Eyre

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    the most important aspect of a novel because they are the reason for the author’s writing the novel. Themes found in Jane Eyre include the supernatural‚ visions‚ and dreams that Jane encounters. Firstly‚ the supernatural play an important role throughout the novel. Great coincidences suggest a greater force is at work. An example of this is in the very beginning of the novel; Jane is unfairly convicted of attacking her cousin John Reed. Her punishment is that she be locked in the red-room. The red-room

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    Jane Eyre-Lowood

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    2014 Jane Eyre: Mrs. Reed and Her Children The story Jane Eyre begins with Jane living at Gateshead with her aunt Mrs. Reed and her three cousins John‚ Eliza and Georgina. Jane gives great description of her characters and we get good impressions of all the characters and how Jane feels about them as well. Mrs. Reed is Jane’s aunt‚ by marriage. How Jane describes her she seems as a selfish and cold hearted. Though she promises her late husband‚ Mr. Reed that she would take care of Jane as her

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    Jane Eyre Suffering

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    Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte is the tale of a young lady‚ twenty-nine years young at the time of narration‚ who encountered both Heaven and Hell during her short lifetime. From being an orphan to marrying her master‚ twenty years elder‚ Jane Eyre truly encountered the struggles of life. Though she suffered and encountered trials and tribulations‚ she managed to portray herself as an independent‚ strong willed‚ and courageous woman‚ which was uncommon during life time. Jane Eyre’s misery started

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    Jane Austen's Life

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    Jane Austen’s Life On December 16‚ 1775 in Steventon Rectory‚ Hampshire‚ England‚ a world famous English novelist was born. Her name was Jane Austen. She was born to George and Cassandra Austen. George was the rector of the Anglican parishes at Steventon‚ Hampshire‚ and in another a nearby village. Jane had six brothers and one sister. Their names were James‚ George‚ Edward‚ Henry‚ Francis‚ Charles‚ and Cassandra Elizabeth Austen. When Mrs. Ann Cawley moved to Southampton from Steventon‚ Hampshire

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    Jane Eyre is the main character in novel. She originally has a rough time living with the reeds‚ her cousins‚ but it was not until she could no longer put up with the abuse that she lashed out. Looking at Jane’s past‚ it is not very hard to believe that jane had many emotions bottled up inside of her. When a person bottles up their emotions there comes a point in time when those emotions erupt and people often explode in anger or violence. In this case Jane is letting out all the anger she had‚ which

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    Jane Eyre Individuality

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    In the book Jane Eyre by Bronte‚ Jane is in a state of confusion when she is locked in the room alone with Mr. Mason. She has been categorized in the social class of a woman who would never find herself in the position that she is in. Normally the society that she lives in would not allow a governess to be locked in a room alone with a strange man whom she does not know. Janes internal conflict between her conformity to her social status and her individuality contributes to the meaning of the book

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    Motifs in Jane Eyre

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    crimson – signifies passion‚ danger‚ aggression‚ suppression‚ and confinement…a way of policing female passion The red-room can be viewed as a symbol of what Jane must overcome in her struggles to find freedom‚ happiness‚ and a sense of belonging. In the red-room‚ Jane’s position of exile and imprisonment first becomes clear. Although Jane is eventually freed from the room‚ she continues to be * socially ostracized (by Rochester’s aristocrat friends who visit Thornfield) * financially trapped

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    Jane Eyre: Wasteland

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    Jane Eyre: Final Reflection A wasteland is a time of great struggle and decomposition‚ it is a place that seems dark and dreary‚ it is also a major thematic idea in Jane Eyre. A wasteland was displayed in this text by showing all of Jane’s inner and outer struggles with society and herself. There are many ways in which a wasteland was displayed in this novel. To start off‚ Jane‚ the protagonist is a little lonely orphan girl with no relatives or friends to help her. All she really has is

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    Jane Austen's Persuasion

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    Chacon Professor Kay Decasper ENC 1101_48 18 April 2016 Persuasion Jane Austen’s Persuasion showed the way society worked in the 1800’s. Women of high society were to marry men of the same social status in those times. The personalities of the families of the elite were either snobby‚ dramatic‚ or in some cases generous at times. The upper-class families seemed to have it easier than people of less fortunate homes. Jane Austen takes us back in time to an era of manners and how people from the

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    jane eyre st.john

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    One’s attitude toward change correlates directly with the outcome of his or her life. In the novel‚ Jane Eyre‚ Charlotte Bronte examines how emphasizing or neglecting what makes one truly happy when dealing with change impacts one’s life. St.John throws away the possibility of a happy life when he makes the life changing decision to be a missionary and thus dies a lonely unsatisfied mad‚ whereas‚ when Jane faces the two biggest changes of her life‚ she puts what will make her happy first‚ which in turn

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