The accession of Queen Victoria to the throne of England in 1837 gave birth to a period of stability in the country. The advent of democracy, popular education, urbanization transformed the country into a desirable place to live. However, these advancements constituted the tip of the iceberg. The Victorian society was a deviant one due to class ideology. Materially based marriage for example, were the manifestation of such an iniquitous system. In her four novels, Jane Eyre, Shirley, Villette and The Professor, Charlotte Brontë acrimoniously criticizes money-driven matrimonies. Thus, this article aims to examine the socio-economic effects of such mercenary unions not only on the suitors, but also on the partners
This article is devoted to the problems of women and society in the novels of Charlotte Bronte. Sinc...
This B.A. essay examines how the “Woman Question” is presented in the nineteenth century novels The ...
Entitled The Idea of Marriage in 19th Century England: The Characters and Social Settings in Jane Au...
Jane Eyre is a novel written in the early nineteenth century (1847). It depicts the English society ...
TITLE: Marriage and the Position of Women in Anne Brontë's The Tenant of Wildfell Hall and Charlotte...
Access restricted to the OSU CommunityThe Victorian period was a time of intense struggle over and c...
This paper deals with the historical background to Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre, the Victorian era. ...
This paper investigates the questions of Charlotte Bronte's gothic romance novel, Jane Eyre (1847) a...
This thesis is an examination of women's roles in Victorian England through analysis of female chara...
Engagement in Victorian era was considered as a way to gain social status than romantic interlude fo...
This essay focuses on the way Brontë explores, via references to bodily sensation and material objec...
Charlotte Brontë's Shirley leads us back to the early nineteenth century, into the period of the Na...
Treball Final de Grau en Estudis Anglesos. Codi: EA0938. Curs acadèmic 2019/2020Middle-class women f...
The connection between social change and marriage is of critical concern for nineteenth century Engl...
This essay focuses on the similarities and differences between the female protagonists’ romantic af...
This article is devoted to the problems of women and society in the novels of Charlotte Bronte. Sinc...
This B.A. essay examines how the “Woman Question” is presented in the nineteenth century novels The ...
Entitled The Idea of Marriage in 19th Century England: The Characters and Social Settings in Jane Au...
Jane Eyre is a novel written in the early nineteenth century (1847). It depicts the English society ...
TITLE: Marriage and the Position of Women in Anne Brontë's The Tenant of Wildfell Hall and Charlotte...
Access restricted to the OSU CommunityThe Victorian period was a time of intense struggle over and c...
This paper deals with the historical background to Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre, the Victorian era. ...
This paper investigates the questions of Charlotte Bronte's gothic romance novel, Jane Eyre (1847) a...
This thesis is an examination of women's roles in Victorian England through analysis of female chara...
Engagement in Victorian era was considered as a way to gain social status than romantic interlude fo...
This essay focuses on the way Brontë explores, via references to bodily sensation and material objec...
Charlotte Brontë's Shirley leads us back to the early nineteenth century, into the period of the Na...
Treball Final de Grau en Estudis Anglesos. Codi: EA0938. Curs acadèmic 2019/2020Middle-class women f...
The connection between social change and marriage is of critical concern for nineteenth century Engl...
This essay focuses on the similarities and differences between the female protagonists’ romantic af...
This article is devoted to the problems of women and society in the novels of Charlotte Bronte. Sinc...
This B.A. essay examines how the “Woman Question” is presented in the nineteenth century novels The ...
Entitled The Idea of Marriage in 19th Century England: The Characters and Social Settings in Jane Au...