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    Women have always struggled to get equality they deserved from the society Victorian era to 21st Century due to male dominance‚ depression‚ hysteria‚ and gender roles. Female suppression is mostly due to male dominance because the men also feel like they were better and strong than the women. In the Victorian Era‚ women faced a lot challenges considering equality and rights compared to the 21st century. In the 21st century‚ Women have received more equality and rights in general society thanks to

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    Goblin Market/Symbolism

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    read in multiple forms. My interpretation of the poem is that it focuses about female heroism and sisterhood. Alternatively‚ it could also be said that the poem is a contemptuously mocking criticism on the way women were objectified during the Victorian Era. This can be inferred as the poem is predominantly about sexual purity. This poem also contains many symbolisms where its use is to describe other alternative ideas and interpretations. Symbols in this poem vary from the use of fruits‚ the moon

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    opening chapters. When Charlotte Bronte wrote "Jane Eyre" in 1847‚ it became an immediate bestseller. It contained themes of which were previously rarely brought to light and of which many believed to be controversial‚ such as women’s place in the Victorian society‚ of which Bronte lived in. "Jane Eyre" was written in first person narrative. This technique immediately allows the reader to relate to and connect with the main character’s emotions and experiences‚ and her isolation. In this book‚ the author

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    Great Expectations

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    true meaning of life and what values are most important. Dickens uses a range of characters to show Pip learning this lesson and to provide insights into various aspects of the Victorian era culture. Characters such as Joe and Magwitch provide an insight into the education and the crime and justice systems of Victorian England‚ along the importance of social class and wealth. Whilst‚ Estella and Miss Havisham provide an insight into the position of women and the inequality of power between the genders

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    exaggerating the upper-class morals and the frivolity of the characters. The satire that is portrayed in the play is very obvious‚ however today requires to match with the context of the times‚ Wilde’s satire is centered in the aristocratic lives of the Victorian social system‚ this is first recognised when Algernon first introduced‚ immediately posed as a hypocrite‚ eating cucumber sandwiches that he told Jack not to eat‚ Algernon is also narcissistic ‚ when at the piano he states that “I don’t play accurately

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    Analysis "Dover Beach"

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    Analysis of "Dover Beach" The Victorian Age was a different time period. It was the beginning of a new civilization based on industry‚ time‚ and money. The values brought about by the changing times were hard for the British to cope with. Conflicting ideas of science and religion‚ education and work‚ and not reflecting upon actions‚ caused confusion that was associated with the Victorian Age. Mathew Arnold observed the problem of the changing times and sought after answers to the problems that

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    appropriate to describe a work of art‚ which Hard Times undoubtedly is‚ as a moral fable or a morality play‚ yet the fact remains that there is a strong moral intention behind this novel. Hard Times is a satirical attack on some of the evils and vices of Victorian society. Satire has always corrective purpose and is therefore basically moral in its approach to the subjects it deals with. Apart from that‚ there are passages of direct moralising in this novel. Hard Times is a novel which from the moment of

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    Breaking the Mold The pressure to conform to an ideal image is a reoccurring theme throughout literature and even in our culture today. In the highly repressive social climate of the Victorian Era‚ women‚ much like children‚ were seen rather than heard. The ideal Victorian woman is hardly descriptive of Nora in Henrik Ibson’s A Doll House. Through careful observation and questioning‚ Nora recognizes the injustice of the male-dominated society in which she lives. Nora’s discomposure with as her begin

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    Jane Eyre and Feminism

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    Charlotte Bronte’s novel Jane Eyre embraces many feminist views in opposition to the Victorian feminine ideal. Charlotte Bronte herself was among the first feminist writers of her time‚ and wrote this book in order to send the message of feminism to a Victorian-Age Society in which women were looked upon as inferior and repressed by the society in which they lived. This novel embodies the ideology of equality between a man and woman in marriage‚ as well as in society at large. As a feminist writer

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    strong spirit‚ especially when she fights back against the bullying of John Reed‚ her cousin. “I received him in frantic sort.” For Jane to fight back against him‚ is an example of her female empowerment and her fighting the patriarchal ways of the Victorians. Women weren’t expected to be opinionated however Jane challenges this‚ even in her childhood and this is proved as she doesn’t sit back and take what John Reed says to her nor what he does to her. Melanie the protagonist in “The Magic Toyshop”

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