"Jane Eyre" (Charlotte Bronte), The Feminist Tract
Date Submitted: 05/21/2004 05:22:51
Category: / Literature / European Literature
Length: 9 pages (2449 words)
Category: / Literature / European Literature
Length: 9 pages (2449 words)
In 1837 critic Robert Southey wrote to Charlotte Bronte,
'Literature cannot be the business of a woman's life, and it
ought not to be. The more she is engaged in her proper duties,
the less leisure will she have for it, even as an accomplishment
and a recreation,' (Gaskell 102). This opinion was not held by
only one person, but by many. Indeed, it is this attitude, one
that debases women and their abilities, to which
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Ed. L. Harris and E. Tennyson. Michigan: Gale
Research Co., 1985. 61-62
Gaskell, E. The Life of Charlotte Bronte. England: E.P. Dutton,
Inc., 1975
London, Bette. 'The Pleasure of Submission: Jane Eyre and the
Production of the Text.' 'ELH.' Spring 1991. 195-213
Schact, Paul. 'Jane Eyre and the History of Self-Respect.'
'Modern Language Quarterly.' Dec 1991. 423-53
Sienkewicz, Anne W. 'Jane Eyre An Autobiography.'
Masterplots II. Ed. Frank Magill. California: Salem Press,
1991. 745-748
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