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Jane Eyre: Victorian Women’s Madness Maze

Abstract
Madness has always been a difficult concept to define as different sorts of behaviors have been considered madness in different times as well as different geographical, social and cultural contexts. In other words, the concept of mental illness is socially constructed. Madness is one of the main themes in Jane Eyre and appears throughout the novel. One character commits suicide, two characters go mad and Jane has her moments of madness. Jane’s madness, however, is closely related to the social context of the novel. Hence this study of Charlotte Brönte’s autobiographical novel aims to shed light on how mental illness as a social construct inappropriately and unjustly were applied to the protagonist of the novel by patriarchal familial, institutional, ideological and marital forces as a means of social control. This study provides proof that Jane’s sanity and chastity was measured based on her conformity to the Victorian norms and her deviation from social norms was considered as insanity. The significance of this study lies chiefly on its comprehensive analysis of the protagonist’s personality development throughout her Bildungsroman. This study is based on close reading of the novel which provides readers clear evidence of how social forces make Jane consciously suppress her feelings or unconsciously conform to the norms that she once abhorred which, consequently, results in her mental problems.
Degree
Student essay
Other description
Madness has always been a difficult concept to define as different sorts of behaviors have been considered madness in different times as well as different geographical, social and cultural contexts. In other words, the concept of mental illness is socially constructed. Madness is one of the main themes in Jane Eyre and appears throughout the novel. One character commits suicide, two characters go mad and Jane has her moments of madness. Jane’s madness, however, is closely related to the social context of the novel. Hence this study of Charlotte Brönte’s autobiographical novel aims to shed light on how mental illness as a social construct inappropriately and unjustly were applied to the protagonist of the novel by patriarchal familial, institutional, ideological and marital forces as a means of social control. This study provides proof that Jane’s sanity and chastity was measured based on her conformity to the Victorian norms and her deviation from social norms was considered as insanity. The significance of this study lies chiefly on its comprehensive analysis of the protagonist’s personality development throughout her Bildungsroman. This study is based on close reading of the novel which provides readers clear evidence of how social forces make Jane consciously suppress her feelings or unconsciously conform to the norms that she once abhorred which, consequently, results in her mental problems.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/56080
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  • Kandidatuppsatser / Institutionen för språk och litteraturer
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Studentuppsats (732.8Kb)
Date
2018-03-26
Author
Arab, Nargess
Keywords
engelska
Charlotte Brontë
Jane Eyre
Feminist Criticism
Victorian psychiatry
women mental illnesses
patriarchy
social construction of madness
marginalization
Series/Report no.
SPL kandidatuppsats, engelska
SPL 2017-080
Language
eng
Metadata
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