Avancerad sökning
Visar resultat 6 - 10 av 69 uppsatser som matchar ovanstående sökkriterier.
6. I will break obstacles to happiness : An Analysis of how Mr. Rochester Challenges the Victorian Masculine Norm and the Boundaries of Separate Spheres in Jane Eyre
Kandidat-uppsats, Högskolan Väst/Institutionen för individ och samhälleSammanfattning : .... LÄS MER
7. Examining Childhood Resilience in Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre : A Psychoanalytic Critical Reading
Kandidat-uppsats, Högskolan Dalarna/Institutionen för språk, litteratur och lärandeSammanfattning : .... LÄS MER
8. The Dream Interpreter : A Historical and Postcolonial Analysis of the Development of Antoinette Cosway in Jean Rhys's Wide Sargasso Sea
Kandidat-uppsats, Högskolan i Gävle/Avdelningen för humanioraSammanfattning : This essay will discuss Jean Rhys’s novel Wide Sargasso Sea from a postcolonial and historical perspective, to show how Rhys’s recreation of Bertha Rochester’s past (Charlotte Brontë’s madwoman in Jane Eyre) can make her end appear triumphant. The analysis will be based on a combination of aspects from the novel’s contemporary English and Caribbean societies and Edward Said’s thoughts about Orientalism, mainly the binary opposition between Europe and the Orient and the creation of Orientalist knowledge. LÄS MER
9. What Class Does to the Mind : Class and social standing in Jane Eyre
Kandidat-uppsats, Karlstads universitet/Institutionen för språk, litteratur och interkultur (from 2013)Sammanfattning : The purpose of this essay is to examine the importance of class in Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre and its impact on how the characters perceive one another. Taking a closer look at the attitude the characters, John Reed, Jane Eyre and Mrs. Reed have towards each other and how the influence of the Victorian society came about. LÄS MER
10. Passion and Feeling versus Religion and ‘Pure’ Affection in Jane Eyre
Kandidat-uppsats,Sammanfattning : The purpose of this essay is to investigate the protagonist and narrator in Charlotte Brontës Jane Eyre, it explores how Jane to a certain extent both represents and challenges the norms set by the Victorian society since it was during this time that the novel was published. By taking a closer look at the novel in relation to Victorian society’s norms and ideals the essay will show that the conflict that Jane faces in the novel is between love, feeling and passion versus religious norms and principles. LÄS MER