Jane Eyre and her fight Jane Eyre is a classic British novel following the development of a young lady in the mid 1800s. Jane has grown into a wise, self-sustaining, independent woman. It was a struggle for her when she grew up and lived in the lower class. In the whole novel, Jane tries to prove that its class and gender do not affect personality. This novel explains Jane's fight against social expectations of class and sex. Jane's first struggle began with her aunt raising her.
Jane Air's main confrontation is her fight against social and personal limitations. The first fight was because she could live with poor relatives and live with wealthy relatives. Jane chose a richer relatives because he thought that his poor relatives were dirty and impolite, but because they are not bad for her, she may feel happy for this poor family . The second confrontation took place when Jane discovered that Rochester got married to Berta. Jane can choose to be with him or leave him. The next conflict is that Jane and Edward are trying to get married, but Edward's mother does not approve marriage because of their age and differences in social education and points. The gap between them is 20 years, and as it is today, it is not accepted. An example of the last confrontation is that I returned to Rochester a year after the fire. But Jane got married to him.
Jane Eyre: A novelist and a hero's girlfriend eventually became Edward Rochester's second wife. As a baby orphan, Jane was struggling in childhood when he was almost innocent and became a tutor at Thornfield Hall. Although superficially simple, Jane is full of passion and solid principles, emphasizing freedom and independence. She is also conscientious and definitive Christian. She is 10 years old at the beginning of the novel and is 19 or 20 years old at the end of the main story. As mentioned in the last chapter of the novel, she is married to Edward Rochester for ten years, and she is about 30 years old when she finished.
Through her life, Charlotte Bronte's role in Jane Air was forced to face himself because he was struggling to balance the desire for self-sufficiency and the desire for integrity. From her childhood struggle at Gateshead to Mr. Rochester's final satisfaction, Jane experienced moral and emotional developmental changes. One of the most important lessons that Jane has learned is to use her will to rule her mind. Any difficulties and experiences Jane experienced in her life made her the end of the novel.