Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre and Charles Dickens' Great Expectations
[2023-07-05 11:10:55]
Great expectations of Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre and Charles Dickens Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre and Charles Dickens's "Great Expectations" have many Victorian similarities. Both novels are influenced by the same three elements. The first one is Gothic novel, and it breathes mystery, suspense, horror in the work. The second one is a romantic poet who gives literary freedom, individualism, and nature. The third person is a Bai Lini hero, including abandoned or rebels who are seeking a more pure living with a proud misery.
"Great expectation and Jane Eyre: Compare and contrast the two growth novels" Charles Dickens (author of Great Expectations) and Charlotte Brontë (author of Jane Eyre) grew in the early 19th century. Each writer, who grew up at the same time, incorporates elements of the Victorian society into these novels. Both novels depict the pursuit of the meaning of the hero's life and the essence of the world in the context of seeking social order. - Jane Air's orphan Jane, one of the orphans of Novel Jane Air is depicted as a victim of charity. From the eyes of others, she is seen as being smaller or lower than herself. Wealthy people believe that orphans are children who need charity and children who lack morality, ambition and culture. Jane tells her that she does not have a family, and her mother and father say "Two will die within a month" (58; Chapter 3).
The story of Jane Eyre reflects the life of Charlotte Bronte as being autobiographical. For example, like Jane Eyre, parents of Charlotte Bronte died and she was sent to her aunt to take care of her. She was treated seriously when she was at my aunt's house. Jane Eyre is full of erotic tension, passion, satire; three features that distinguish Jane Eyre from other Victorian books. In addition, Jane Eyre wrote about children's point of view, but at that time it did not appear to any book.
Charlotte Bronte uses many letters as a symbol to explain the religious theme of the novel Jane Eyre. "The treaty is not moral, self-righteousness is not religion" (preface v). In Jane Eyre, Bronte supports the theme that habitual behavior is not always moral through the traditional characters of Mrs. Reid, Brockhurst, and St. John Rivers. The novel starts with Gateshead Hall. Jane is when I need to get away from my cousin and my cousin. Mrs. Reed has a higher rank in society. Because he is a subordinate of Jane, Mrs. Reed regarded Jane as a wanderer. Miss Abbott told her that Miss Bessie and Miss Abbott dragged Jane into the "red room", which is the worst room for the child. She must stay in the red room, she retaliates against John Reed 's attack on her, her unwilling cousin