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#charlottebronte #janeeyre #janeeyrecharlottebronte
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petaltexturedskies · 3 months
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Charlotte Brontë, from Jane Eyre
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emeraldspiral · 1 month
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So another interesting thing about Jane Eyre is it's take on relationship inequality.
Like, Jane is 18 at the beginning of the story and Rochester is said to be something like 35-38. And it's not casually brushed aside like that was normal back in the day. It wasn't. Concerns about the age gap are raised within the text. But the story emphasizes that Jane feels comfortable accepting Rochester's proposal, despite the age difference, the class difference, and him being her boss, because Jane feels that Rochester regards her as an equal. When they converse, Jane doesn't feel any tension, like she has to impress him or try to read his mind and say whatever he wants to hear. She feels that he respects her and values her thoughts and isn't compelled to use his power against her if she says something to displease him. Around the midpoint of the story, Jane believes that Rochester is going to marry another woman, and resolves to leave because she's heartbroken, believing that because she is poor and plain Rochester can't possibly be as hurt by their parting as she is, and he'll forget her and move on long before she does. But it turns out to be the opposite. After finding out about Bertha, Rochester begs Jane to stay and insists he'll be miserable forever without her, while Jane, still thinking she's too poor and plain to ever attract someone like him again, resists all temptation and leaves him. And she does this specifically because she feels that if she were to compromise her morals and self-respect to be Mr. Rochester's mistress, then he would lose respect for her and the relationship would fall apart. It was only by maintaining her integrity that the relationship could stay in-tact when the reconciled at the end.
St. John Rivers on the other hand, I don't think is given a definite age, but I think he's intended to be a much younger man, probably in his early 20s. He is poor and without relations aside from his sisters or any other connections, just as Jane. Jane finds out they're actually cousins at the same time she learns she's come into a vast fortune that was willed to her rather than the Rivers, but decides to share her fortune equally with them. So she arguably had more social capital, even though she made an effort to put St. John on equal footing with her, because the money was hers by right and she could've presumably cut him off at any time, just as easily as Rochester could've terminated Jane from her job.
And yet, Jane's relationship with St. John is vastly more unequal than her relationship with Rochester. Even though Jane practically worshiped Rochester but only cares for St. John as a brother and is acutely aware of his faults, she still finds herself desperately craving his approval in a way she never did with Rochester. And St. John is willing to exploit that intentionally. He asks her to do things she doesn't want to and make sacrifices for him just because he knows she'll do anything to please him, and that's why he thinks she's the perfect wife for him. Where Rochester tries to explain himself and persuade Jane not to leave him by addressing her concerns, St. John basically tries to command Jane to marry him and refuses to accept her "no" as final. He withholds affection from Jane as a tactic to get her to compromise in order to reconcile with him when he's the one who should be apologizing to her and considering her needs and not just his own. Jane knows that she can't ever be happy with him because he doesn't respect her and his lack of respect only makes her want to seek his approval, which he is all too happy to exploit for his own benefit.
But Jane ultimately stays firm and rejects St. John's proposal of a loveless marriage, just as she rejected Rochester's proposal of an unlawful marriage, because both situations were doomed to fail if she didn't put her own self-respect first.
So this novel from 1847 was really saying that power dynamics aren't pure black and white. Age and class and wealth and status can be a factor in making a relationship unequal, but you can also be equal on pretty much all social axis and still have inequality in a relationship. What's really important is that there's mutual respect.
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peacefulandcozy · 10 months
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Instagram credit: coffeeyre
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adobongsiopao · 11 months
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"‘Are you injured, sir?’ I think he was swearing, but am not certain; however, he was pronouncing some formula which prevented him from replying to me directly."
— "Jane Eyre"; Chapter XII
Art: https://www.twitter.com/Paigumondus
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unamazing-sheep21 · 7 months
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The many uses of a Byronic Hero
chair ( Jane & Edward - Jane Eyre)
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Pillow ( Christine & Erik - Phantom of the Opera)
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Car ( Catherine & Heathcliff - Wuthering Heights)
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Water dispenser ( Edith & Thomas - Crimson Peak)
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s-u-w-i · 6 months
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Autumn always feels like the perfect time to reread Jane Eyre, so, have some Jane and Mr. Rochester (though I've made him too cute, so, any other Brontë or Austen couple is also possible) 🍂
Mmm, I hope one day I'll manage to paint a colorful landscape and be happy with the result...It's so much easier in black and white :')
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You’re in her DMs, I’m screaming her name across the moors and she somehow hears me. We’re not the same.
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thecollectibles · 2 years
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Jane Eyre by micha ji
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starslake · 4 months
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You're lucky, Miss Eyre. If you do not love another living soul then you'll never be disappointed.
JANE EYRE | Episode 1 | 2006.
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detroitlib · 1 month
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From our stacks: Illustration from Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë. With Wood Engravings by Fritz Eichenberg. New York: Random House, 1943.
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CHARLOTTE BRONTE
CHARLOTTE BRONE
1816-1855
Charlotte Brontë was an English novelist and poet; she was the oldest of the three Bronte sisters. She is best known for her novel Jane Eyre (1847) and became well-known in her lifetime. Jane Eyre explores themes of gender and class in Victorian England through her heroine. She was able to mix romance with realism, and initially had to publish her book under the name ‘Currer Bell’.
            Bronte was born in Market Street, Thornton; her home is still standing and is known as the Bronte Birthplace. Her father was an Irish Anglican clergyman, in 1820 her family moved to the village of Haworth where her father worked. Her mother died of cancer in 1821, leaving her six children to be taken care of by their sister Elizabeth. Her father then  sent them to a Lancashire school in 1824, where Bronte believed the poor conditions had permanently affected her health, the school also killed her two sisters who died of tuberculosis in 1825. After her sister’s died, her father removed them from the school.   Bronte then went to school in Mirfield in 1831, and then returned to home school her sisters and then in 1835 went to work as a governess. She returned home to open a school with her sisters but this endeavour was unsuccessful. Instead, they spent their time writing.
            Arthur Bell Nicholls proposed to Bronte but her father was against it due to Nicholls poor financial status. Regardless, Bronte was attracted to Nicholls and married him in 1854, her father refused to give her away so Bronte walked down the aisle without him. Their marriage only lasted a short time, but was a happy one and she got pregnant not long after the wedding.
            In 1855, Bronte became ill and died from hyperemesis gravidarum, a complication of pregnancy which causes nausea. Bronte was aged 38 when she died with her unborn child and was the last to die out of her three sisters.
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#charlottebronte #janeeyre #janeeyrecharlottebronte
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petaltexturedskies · 27 days
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Charlotte Brontë, Jane Eyre  
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eva-eyre · 5 months
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i post for the girls who are poor, obscure, plain, and little
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peacefulandcozy · 1 year
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Instagram credit: danielapardor
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queerbookwhore · 5 months
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Jane eyre was 19 while working for mr Rochester, she should have been experiencing crippling mental illness and a morbid longing for the picturesque at all costs
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