Jean Rhys's "Broad Sargasso Sea" (1966) introduces some of the complex problems of the post-colonial Caribbean society. The main character of Rhys, Antoinette Cosway, is a white Creole in Jamaica, subject to racial confrontation, sexual exploitation, male suppression. She is a systematic victim, not only depriving her class but also depriving meaningful independent survival and important means. Caribbean society after the colony could not solve and raise expectations of colonial people after liberation, but they were bound and maintained in the old legacy of colonial projects.
Colonial discourse in the vast ocean of Sargasso is in the wide ocean of Sargasso and Jean Rees faces the possibilities behind Jane Eyre. Bertha's story, the first Rochester's wife, the broad Sargasso Sea is not only the wonderful demolition of the Bronte heritage but also the history of the curse of the Caribbean colonialism. The story takes place after release of slaves, an uneasy period in the Caribbean ethnic relations being in the most tense state. Antoinette (Rhys changed her name ... the impact on personal and public discourse? Many people may say that it will have a bad influence on conversation.A different age, Education, social level people often have their own e-mail accounts and often communicate electronically with other people.
The heroine Antoinette Cosway at Wide Sargasso Sea of Jean Rhys was created by the devil of Jane Eyre and the wild Bertha Mason. The wonderful achievement of the lease that rewrote Bronte's text is that she produced double achievements for Jane Eyre's crazy lady. The heroine of the wide Sargasso Sea, the beautiful Antoinette Cosway, the heirs of the liberation of wealth were created by demon and beast Berta Mason. The author transformed Mrs Rochester into a personal image, its madness was caused by repression of imperialism and patriarchalism. The vision of Bertha / Antoinette as a crazy frank descendant to the family is no longer reasonable for the reader. In this article, I would like to focus on factors leading to the main character's madness.