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Lavender's AP Lit Class Blog
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
celestine's ideas for essay
One thing that interests me about the book is the progression of Jane's character, especially comparing her personality before and after Lowood. Before Lowood she was extremely passionate. I think that her experience there quelled a lot of her passion, and made her a more modest, unassuming person. Jane is a naturally passionate person, and the school (and her upbringing overall) pushed reason on her. In other words, she's been conditioned. I was thinking about what she'd be like without Lowood, and how the book would be different. She probably would have stayed with Rochester (her morals would be looser and her passion would be greater). That's one idea, but I don't think I could go very in depth with that for an essay. Something else that interests me is the commentary on conventionality contained in the book. I think that this is the best parallel to the Transcendentalist movement in the book, and it's mentioned a lot. One of the messages in the book is that conventionality is not morality. I think in those days people were very conventional, and Charlotte Bronte was speaking out against that. Conventionality is still an issue in today's society, and I think her message should be taken seriously. And the last thing that I'm considering writing about is gender roles and feminism in the book. I find this theme very interesting. I wonder how these ideas were viewed in the mid 1800's, whether they were considered radical. I'm guessing they were. This also ties in with conventionality. Maybe I could write about how some of the ideas in this book were very radical for the time period, and how Charlotte Bronte was going against conventionality by expressing these ideas. Conventionality does not allow for progress.
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I really like your idea of Jane's changed personality. I agree that Lowood toned her down, especially Helen's theology. If you do your essay on this idea, consider the scene where Helen tells Jane she will learn to be different when she is older (you could use this quote to prove that she has). Also, I like Bronte going against conventionality by writing this book. So many of the ideas are nonconformist.Good ideas!
ReplyDeleteA good post, Celestine, and I'm looking forward to your essay. Start with her preface to the second edition and her observation that "conventionality is not morality." Be sure to consider Helen's doctrine of endurance and the influence it apparently had on Jane. And then try to distinguish her own morals from those of society (had she truly been "conditioned", wouldn't she have married St. John? And why does Rochester need to be punished (and what's there with that burst of religious feeling of his--and of St. John) there at the end? If conventionality back in the day (when the novel was written) was largely tied together with a religious outlook, and if Jane/Charlotte essentially trash Brocklehurst for his hypocrisy early on, then why are these religious views suddenly celebrated in the end? Or, is Jane just being a female Emerson, and refining the way she looks at religion (in much the way Ralph does in the Divinity School Address)? Again, I'm looking forward to seeing what you do with these and other ideas in your essay.
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