Jane Eyre is the daughter of a poor parson. She loses her parents shortly after her birth and the poor girl has to live in her aunt’s home. Her aunt, Mrs. Reed, is a very unsympathetic woman and treats her very badly. Mrs. Reed is very dislike her and send her to a charity school for poor girls in Lowood. Maltreated again by the cruel masters there, Jane stays there for eight long years, six in studies, and two in the capacity of a teacher. Jane falls in love with Mr. Rochester, her employer, Jane as a governess for his daughter. But Jane flees from him because she gets to know that Mr. Rochester had a mad wife who is secretly kept under lock and key in the attic of the house. Jane Eyre hurries back to him and becomes his wife when she hears that Mr. Rochester is penniless and disabled.
The Love view of Jane Eyre
Wealth or love? Love is preferred
Health or love? Love is preferred
Law or love? Law must be follow.
The forming reason of Jane Eyre’ love view
Analysis Jane Eyre’s social background
Analysis Jane Eyre’s family environment
Conclusion
References
[1] Newmark, Peter. Approaches to Translation [M].Shanghai: Shanghai Foreign Language Education Press, 2001
[2] Schinstock, D.E., Cuttino, J.F. Real time kinematic solutions of a non-contacting, three dimensional metrology frame[J]. Precision Engineering. 2000, 24(1):70-76
[3]Herresthal,Harald.EdwardGriege[Z].http://www.mnc.net/norway/GRIEGHTM.22 Aug. 2002. 6th Mar. 2006. [1] Allot, M. ed. Charlotte Bronte: Jane Eyre and Villette, A Case Book. [M].1973
[2] Bentley, Phyllis. The Brontes and Their World. [M] 1969.
[3] Breuer H. Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre as a fantasy scenario. [J].Psychoanalytic review, 1999, Vol.85 (6), pp.871-88PubMed
[4] Charlotte Bronte. Jane Eyre[M].北京:知识出版社,2016.
[5] Chesterton,G.K, The Victorian Age in Literature. [M] 1913
[6] Christian, M. G. ed. The Brontes: Bibliographies and Manuseripts, in L. Stevenson, (ed.)Victorian Fiction: A Guide to Research. [M] 1964.
[7] Gaskell, E. C. The life of Charlotte Bronte. [M] London.
[8] Gilbert, Saudra and Susan Guber, The Mad Woman in the Attic: the Woman Writer and the Ninteenth-Century Literature Imagination. [M] 1980.
[9]Griesinger,E. Charlotte Bronte’’s Religion: Faith, Feminism and Jane Eyre. Christianity and Literature: 2008
[10] Laurence Talairach-Vielmas. Portrait of a Governess, Disconnected, Poor, and Plain': Staging the Spectral Self in Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre. [J].Bronte Studies, 2009, Vol.34 (2), pp.127-137
[11] Montegut,Emile. "Jane Eyre is the’’Poetic Life’’and Villette is the’’True Life’’of Charlotte". Charlotte Bronte: Jane Eyre and Villette . 1985
[12] Pauline,Nester. "On Jane Eyre" in women writers-Charlotte Bronte. . 1987
[13] Teachman,D. Understanding Jane Eyre. 2001
[14] 刘丹. Selected Readings in English and American Literatures[M]. 北京:知识产权出版社,2004:64-76