Sunday, August 18, 2019
Essay on Social Conventions in Jane Eyre and Hedda Gabler
Social Conventions in Jane Eyre and Hedda Gabler à à à Charlotte Bronte's novel Jane Eyre and Henrik Ibsen's play Hedda Gabler were written within fifty years of each other in the late 1800s. Both Jane and Hedda exist within the same social contexts. They are women of the middle class in European cultures. The fact Jane is penniless through much of the novel does not exclude her from the middle class. Jane and Hedda's experiences, education and values all belong to the middle class. Therefore it should be no surprise their words echo. In detail and outcome their stories are different. However, it is the constraints of the same social conventions which drive their different destinies. It is the same confusion of social convention with morality and spirituality that pains both their existences. Confusing social convention with legal, moral, and religious codes of conduct is a phenomena not confined to the 19th century. It is this same confusion that created Jim Crow Laws, anti-gay legislation and fuels the fire of the abortion rights debate. à à à à à Social conventions of the 1800's did not allow women of the middle class to live independently. With few exceptions women moved from father's household to husband's household. It was the father's prerogative to arrange a suitable marriage. In truth there might be a carefully selected few to choose from, but any unauthorized selection would hold severe consequences for both men and women. à à à à à Jane Eyre's mother was disowned because she chose to marry an "unapproved" man. Jane would suffer because of this transgression, which occurred before she was even born. After being orphaned, Jane lives with her Aunt Reed. She is continually reminded she is a dependent and is unloved by her r... ...ton: Prentice Hall, 1992. à Ellis, Kate and Kaplan, Ann. Nineteenth Century Women at the Movies: Adapting Classic Womenââ¬â¢s Fiction to Film. Bowling Green, OH: Popular, 1999 à Jane Eyre. Dir. Christy Cabanne. Perf. Virginia Bruce, Colin Clive, and Beryl Mercer. 1934. à Jane Eyre. Dir. Franco Zeffirelli. Perf. William Hurt, Charlotte Gainsborough, and Anna Paquin. 1996 à Jane Eyre. Dir. Julian Aymes. Perf. Timothy Dalton, Zelah Clarke. 1983 à Jane Eyre. Dir. Robert Stevenson. Perf. Joan Fontaine, Orson Welles, and Margaret Oââ¬â¢Brien. 1944 à Peters, Joan D. ââ¬Å"Finding a Voice: Towards a Womanââ¬â¢s Discourse in Dialogue in the Narration of Jane Eyre.â⬠Studies in the Novel. 23 no 2. (1991): 217-36. à Zonana, Joyce. ââ¬Å"The Sultan and the Slave: Feminist Orientalism and the Structure of Jane Eyre.â⬠Signs. 18 no 3. (1993): 592-617
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