Charlotte Bronte was a famous English poet and novelist from the nineteenth century. Though shy and often socially awkward, Bronte was clever, strong-minded, and ambitious. She was fiercely independent and was determined to defy society’s standard for women of the time, though she also took her role of responsibility in the family seriously. Like women through the ages, Charlotte often struggled to balance her responsibilities and her ambition. Because of her life experiences and tenacious spirit, Charlotte Bronte was a woman ahead of her time, determined to forge her way into a literary career where she could support herself financially doing something she loved – writing. Charlotte Bronte was born on April 21, 1816 in northern England in the village of …show more content…
The themes of her early writings centered on romanticism, politics, loyalty, and betrayal. However, Charlotte’s desire to be financially independent and help support her family eventually led to her accepting a teaching position at Roe Head. She later worked as a governess for different families in the area, but she resented the long hours that kept her from being able to write. Her career as a governess was short-lived. She returned home and published a selection of poems with her sisters in 1846 under the pseudonyms of Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell. According to sources, “this was a commercial disaster, selling only two copies, but by the end of 1847 the first novels of all three sisters had been published, and Charlotte’s Jane Eyre was an immediate success” ("Family and Friends - Charlotte Brontë"). She later published Shirley in 1849 and Villette in 1853. Charlotte enjoyed all aspects of the literary business, from meeting with publishers and editing her sisters’ works, to traveling and becoming acquainted with other authors. Charlotte had finally realized her dream of becoming a successful
Her childhood has been described as “painful and lonely” (484), having never established an intimate bond with either of her parents. After emerging from what appears to have been a deep emotional and physical relationship with a woman who ultimately chose to marry, she continued to support herself as an art instructor, author, and designer of greeting cards while writing poetry depicting societal injustices against women. Foreseeing the impending conflict between her personal ambitions and the societal obligations of being a wife, mother, and housekeeper, Charlotte reluctantly entered into marriage with Charles Stetson in May of 1884 after a lengthy courtship. In March of 1885, she gave birth to their only daughter, Katherine, a mere eleven months into the marriage. Following Katherine’s birth, Charlotte chronicled that she experienced intense and unwavering melancholy and nervousness that contributed to an influx of marital tension (Davis)
Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre provided Victorian England with a new kind of woman who represented a shift in the common view of what Mary Wollstonecraft asserted was a limited education for women. Their education kept them childlike and superficial, with most of their attention going toward appearance and with being satisfied mostly with matters of the home. The social pressures prevented women from becoming more interesting through reason and substance which were confined to the masculine sphere. Jane Eyre and Blanche Ingram, with their distinct backgrounds and because of different events both ladies have gone through, separately, can determine how different these two ladies are. Jane Eyre’s social class throughout her life was very ambiguous, never really fitting into one category, often in between levels of the social spectrum.
This demonstration shows of Louisa’s uncontrolled behavior (Douglas). Louisa had a talent for writing. She first wrote books under the pen name of Flora Fairfield. Flower Fables was written under this name (Douglas). This book was written when Alcott was sixteen years old.
“Alcott wrote under various pseudonyms and only started using her own name when she was ready to commit to writing” (Biography.com) During the Civil War, Louisa volunteered as a nurse. While working as a nurse, she wrote her first big story, “Hospital Sketches”. The story is what made Louisa realize that she wanted to be a serious author. While working as a nurse, she got typhoid and had to be sent home, after being sent home is when she started to write “Little Women”. “The great success of Little Women (1869–70) gave Alcott financial independence and created a demand for more books” (Biography.com).
She was third of six children within seven years. In 1821, when she was five, she lost her mother to cancer. Charlotte and her sister, Emily were removed from school because there was no education for middle class families in Haworth. She and her relatives lived with their aunt that was uncommunicative and an elderly servant and their father was interested in his intellectual interests and his griefs. Charlotte’s father expected her and he others to be able to read and continue a conversation with adults about politics.
Emily Bronte is the second of the three daughters, only writing one novel Wuthering Heights, published in 1847. As women were not taken seriously as to men, she wrote under the name Ellis Bell. Only after her death was it revealed that she was the author of Wuthering Heights (Bronte 368). Charlotte Bronte was the eldest of the three sisters, Jane Eyre was the first published novel she wrote in 1847. Alike her sister she used a different
She wrote stories of terror and fights and jilted lovers seeking revenge because she longed for more excitement in her life. She became an author because she enjoyed the work and her family needed the money, just as her inspiration had done. To vent anger and to have fun, she wrote potboilers, which were stories that interested the public at the time. These books involved dramatic plots, spurned lovers, blood, gore, and some type of a chase, which can be witnessed in her book, “A Long Futile Love Chase”. “Louisa May Alcott… wrote a series of thrillers or sensationalist stories before her success with the domestic novel, or the novel of sentiment, Little Women, in 1868” (womenwriters).
Upon her return from England in 1866, she finished and released the first part of Little Women two years later on September 30, partially because her family was in debt again. The first part of the book hit the market in 1866. The commercial success made Alcott and her family rich, The Alcott’s no longer had to worry about the nightmare that tortured them. The instant success surprised her and her publishers. The first book sold 6,000 copies, and 4.000 orders were placed for the next part.
Brontë´s book Jane Eyre, tells much about how the life’s of women during the nineteenth-century Victorian time period and describes many of the struggles the female gender faced during the era. The author presents early in the book that what is expected of a woman through the main character, Jane Eyre’s experience during her childhood and through her life as she grows older. From the very beginning she encounter hardship as Jane discovers the social preconceptions of the social classes and the injustice between the genders. She is an orphan raised by a wealthy family, but her guardian Mrs Reed is her cruel aunt and also her son John Reed threat her poorly.
During her childhood her family moved to Haworth in April 1821. Just days after moving to Haworth her mother passed away from cancer. Her Aunt Elizabeth moved in to help raise the children. She had two sisters, Charlotte and Anne Bronte who were also famous. “She preferred the company of animals to people and rarely travelled, forever yearning for the freedom of Haworth and the moors.”
Jane Eyre: A Quest for True Happiness Charlotte Bronte’s classic heartfelt novel entitled “Jane Eyre” depicts how an unloved orphan constantly wishes for affection and acceptance throughout her life. Even at an early age in life, she never truly understood what it meant to be “loved” and what it means to “love” others. With this, maturing into a young lady definitely opened her eyes to the realities of life. Moreover, the novel also depicts a patriarchal society where women aren’t respected with dignity and equality. In this coming of age novel, discover how a young woman courageously faced her fears and triumphed with love in the end.
Introduction Undoubtedly, two female authors Charlotte Brontë and Jean Rhys went down in history with their novels Jane Eyre and Wide Sargasso Sea which gained the hearts of people, especially women who might see themselves in the destinies of the two women depicted in the novels, and might be inspired, amazed, indignant or resentful by Jane’s unyieldingness, adherence to principles, braveness, desire for love and Antoinette’s energy, exotic nature, and madness. Doubtless, the novel of Charlotte Brontë Jane Eyre belongs to the most published and most read novels within the English literature. Among the very talented Brontë sisters, Charlotte excels the most, but it does not mean she would overshadow her sisters. Her novel Jane Eyre was published
‘British literature through the first half of the nineteenth century was written in the shadow of the French Revolution, with its promise of liberation and its “Reign of Terror.” The Romantic poets championed the rebel - even if it happened to be Satan - in several their works’ (topics). Charlotte Brontë was a writer her entire life and published her first novel, Jane Eyre, in 1847. Even though there was controversial criticism of society's treatment of impoverished women, the book was a success and she continued to follow it with Shirley in 1848.
Charlotte Bronte knew as one of the most talented women authors of the Victorian era. She and her sisters, Emily and Anne grow up in Victorian England, they were inspired by the Romantic authors, and all of them write masterpieces in English literature. Charlotte Bronte faced a lot of difficulties, and obstacles in her life even though she manages to write important works in English Literature. For example, Jane Eyre, The Professor, Shirley, and Villette. At first, she writes Jane Eyre under pseudonym Currer Bell.
In Victorian age females were educated but more of the female population was forced prostitution. There were very less job options for women so they had only this option to earn their living. But charlotte, very beautifully has opposed this trend and showed that women should study and get good jobs instead of ruining themselves in prostitution. Charlotte had a very difficult childhood and has thus seen the reality of the world. So she was well known with the fact that society would not accept her easily.