Understanding Jane Eyre: A Student Casebook to Issues, Sources, and Historical Documents
By (Author) Debra Teachman
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
30th May 2001
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900
823.8
Hardback
232
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
482g
Immediately popular when published over a century and a half ago, Jane Eyre has continued to find appreciative audiences since. This student casebook offers a unique interdisciplinary approach to the study of Charlotte Bronte's landmark novel. While it gives insightful literary analysis, it also contextualizes the novel in terms of the historical social issues it confronts. Expert commentary is supported with primary documents from legal and medical treatises, magazine articles, letters, essays and first hand accounts. A personal biography written by Elizabeth Gaskell, an acquaintance of Bronte, offers a detailed account of the Cowan Bridge School which Charlotte attended and fictionalized in Jane Eyre. Educators will find ideas for teaching these topics and for helping students see the connections between the novel and the social concerns it raises. Devoted to close examination of such topics as the diagnosis and treatment of madness and inheritance and marriage law and custom, this work will help students to understand historical cultural influences of yesterday. Contemporary issues such as education and mental illness raised by Jane Eyre are also discussed. Each section offers valuable ideas for written and oral exploration including role playing, debates, and journal writing assignments. Chapters conclude with suggestions for further reading.
.,."helps to make Jane Eyre timely and significant to contemporary students. This book should be especially popular among students interested in women's issues."-School Library Journal
...helps to make Jane Eyre timely and significant to contemporary students. This book should be especially popular among students interested in women's issues.-School Library Journal
Understanding Jane Eyre requires understanding a woman striving to write in a world where women were not allowed to enter the medical profession, where husbands controlled their wives money and communication. This volume not only analyzes the writing of Charlotte Bronte, but discusses life in Victorian England--the education of girls, the role of the governess, the treatment of women diagnosed as insane, inheritance of marriage laws--and compares it with the 21st century. This book will be useful to social studies, English and women's studies classes.-Gale reference for Students
..."helps to make Jane Eyre timely and significant to contemporary students. This book should be especially popular among students interested in women's issues."-School Library Journal
"Understanding Jane Eyre requires understanding a woman striving to write in a world where women were not allowed to enter the medical profession, where husbands controlled their wives money and communication. This volume not only analyzes the writing of Charlotte Bronte, but discusses life in Victorian England--the education of girls, the role of the governess, the treatment of women diagnosed as insane, inheritance of marriage laws--and compares it with the 21st century. This book will be useful to social studies, English and women's studies classes."-Gale reference for Students
DEBRA TEACHMAN teaches English Literature and composition at New Mexico State University, Alamogordo.