Criticism Flashcards

1
Q

Terry Eagleton on Jane as Governess and Orphan

A

‘leaves the self a free, blank, pre-social atom: free to be injured and exploited but free also to progress, move through the class structure’

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2
Q

Roy Pascal:

A

even lies are in the service of authenticity

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3
Q

Sally Shuttleworth:

A

‘Jane as child, presents the same psychological formation as Jane in adulthood. The history she offers is that of a series of moments of conflict… the endless reiteration of the same’

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4
Q

Peter Coveney:

A

‘Jane Eyre is perhaps the first heroine in English fiction, to be given, chronologically at least, as a psychic whole. Nothing, in fact, quite like Jane Eyre had ever been attempted before’

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5
Q

Rosemary Jackson:

A

the Gothic ‘characteristically attempts to compensate from lack resulting from cultural constraints: it is a literature of desire, which seeks that which is experienced as absence and loss’

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6
Q

Inga-Stina Ewbank:

A

In Jane ‘the love story, the woman question and the governess (social) problem coalesce’

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7
Q

Terry Eagleton on Jane’s ambiguous social position

A

‘She lives at that ambiguous point in the social structure at which two worlds- an internal one of emotional hungering, and an external one of harsh, mechanical necessity - meet and collide

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8
Q

Katherine Hughes:

A

Jane the governess is a daring alter ego and a surrogate and spokeswoman for all middle-class women.

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9
Q

Gilbert and Gubar:

A

‘monsters’ in female novels are displaced symptoms of authorial anxiety as they were trespassing on a male domain

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10
Q

Adrienne Rich:

A

distinction between Bertha’s animism and Jane’s virginity is a crystallisation of the sexual double standards of Victorian masculinity. ‘The nineteenth century loose woman might have sexual feelings, but the nineteenth-century wife did not and must not’

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11
Q

Sally Shuttleworth:

A

the two figures in Victorian discourse ‘who demarcated the sphere of excess were the passionate child and the madwoman’

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12
Q

Mary Poovey and Katherine Hughes on the cultural anxieties in the governess’ distress

A

‘the tension which the governess embodies - concerning social respectability, sexual morality, and financial self-reliance’

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13
Q

early reviewers denounced the ‘coarseness’ of the language, the ‘unfeminine’ laxity of moral tone, and the _________ which made its hero cruel, brutal and yet attractive.

A

‘dereliction of decorum’

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14
Q

Margaret Elephant writing in 1855

A

‘[Jane Eyre] the impetuous little spirit that dashed into our well-ordered world, broke its boundaries and defied its principles = and the most alarming revolution has followed the invasion of Jane Eyre’

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15
Q

‘Every page burns with moral ______’ wrote an early critic

A

Jacobinism

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16
Q

Matthew Arnold

A

‘the writer’s mind contains nothing but hunger, rebellion and rage’

17
Q

George Henry Lewes, December 1847

A

‘It is an autobiography - not, perhaps, in the naked facts and circumstances, but in the actual suffering and experience… it is soul speaking to soul’

18
Q

Algrnon Charles Swinburne regarded it as a work of ‘genius’ because it had the

A

‘power to make us feel in every nerve, at every step forward’

19
Q

Virginia Woolf, 1916

A

‘all her force, and it is the more tremendous for being constricted, goes into the assertion, “I love”, “I hate”, “I suffer”.’

20
Q

Raymond Williams, 1970

A

‘in the tightening Victorian world of rigid self-control…. the Bronte sisters knew a whole structure of repression in their time; knew it and in their own ways broke it with a strength and a courage that puts us all in their debt’

21
Q

D.H. Lawrence, 1929

A

‘I find Jane verging towards pornography’

22
Q

Elizabeth Rigby 1948

A

deplored Jane Eyre as ‘pre-eminently an anti-Christian composition’

23
Q

Helen Glen

A

‘the novel re-inflects the religious narrative, saying that the values of this world and the next can be reconciled’

24
Q

Peter J. Bellis

A

Essay: ‘in the window-seat: vision and power in Jane Eyre’ talks about Lacan’s ‘sceptic drive’

25
Q

GH LEWES

A

‘reality - deep, significant reality, is the great characteristic of the book’

26
Q

Rigby on link to chartism

A

’ the tone of the mind and thought which has… fostered Chartism and rebellion at home, is the same which has also written Jane Eyre’.

27
Q

Gilbert and Gubar on principles

A

“‘principle and law’ in the abstract do not always coincide with the deepest principles and laws of her own being’.