textCharlotte Brontë's novel, Jane Eyre, is commonly read as a feminist bildungsroman in which a young woman claims her independence. In opposition to these readings, I instead choose to question the ways in which the novel's feminist potential is elided by its simultaneous imperial project. Using the figure of Bertha Mason, I trace the ways in which Jane Eyre's relationship with Edward Rochester is constructed through Bertha's dehumanization in order to reassert the dominance of the healthy Anglo-European family. I examine Jane Eyre's claims to subjectivity, alongside Bertha's very few textual interventions, through the lens of affect theory to show the way in which Bertha Mason, rather than Jane Eyre's mad double, represents nineteenth-ce...
This article re-examines the accusation of coarseness directed at Edward Fairfax Rochester, the male...
The varying definitions surrounding the Gothic double reveal the formulaic nature of the trope: the ...
Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte's 1847 novel, follows the protagonist, for whom the title is named, in a...
textCharlotte Brontë's novel, Jane Eyre, is commonly read as a feminist bildungsroman in which a you...
This thesis is designed to show the development of feminist power of Jane Eyre, the heroine of Charl...
Madness has long been an object of fascination in the cultural imagination, constituting the focal p...
Jane Eyre (1847) is a multidimensional novel in which many different interpretations are blended tog...
This paper aims to accomplish the following objectives: locate instances of female madness or hyster...
Since the 19th century, feminism has become one of the most important and popular topics. According ...
Charlotte Brontë (1816-1855) is an English writer whose life has affected her writings especially in...
Charlotte Bronte’s famed novel Jane Eyre was among the first novels celebrated by early feminist the...
Charlotte Bronte\u27s Jane Eyre is upheld by feminist critics as a revolutionary tract that expresse...
An exploration into the complex underpinnings of an evolving mind, Jane Eyre is both a literal and m...
Investigating conceptualisations of the feminine creative imagination, this thesis examines represen...
All human beings seek certain identities in order to understand their existence and position in soci...
This article re-examines the accusation of coarseness directed at Edward Fairfax Rochester, the male...
The varying definitions surrounding the Gothic double reveal the formulaic nature of the trope: the ...
Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte's 1847 novel, follows the protagonist, for whom the title is named, in a...
textCharlotte Brontë's novel, Jane Eyre, is commonly read as a feminist bildungsroman in which a you...
This thesis is designed to show the development of feminist power of Jane Eyre, the heroine of Charl...
Madness has long been an object of fascination in the cultural imagination, constituting the focal p...
Jane Eyre (1847) is a multidimensional novel in which many different interpretations are blended tog...
This paper aims to accomplish the following objectives: locate instances of female madness or hyster...
Since the 19th century, feminism has become one of the most important and popular topics. According ...
Charlotte Brontë (1816-1855) is an English writer whose life has affected her writings especially in...
Charlotte Bronte’s famed novel Jane Eyre was among the first novels celebrated by early feminist the...
Charlotte Bronte\u27s Jane Eyre is upheld by feminist critics as a revolutionary tract that expresse...
An exploration into the complex underpinnings of an evolving mind, Jane Eyre is both a literal and m...
Investigating conceptualisations of the feminine creative imagination, this thesis examines represen...
All human beings seek certain identities in order to understand their existence and position in soci...
This article re-examines the accusation of coarseness directed at Edward Fairfax Rochester, the male...
The varying definitions surrounding the Gothic double reveal the formulaic nature of the trope: the ...
Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte's 1847 novel, follows the protagonist, for whom the title is named, in a...