Abandoning And Re-Inhabiting Domestic Space In Jane Eyre

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The Oxford dictionary describes feminism to be the advocacy of women’s rights on the grounds of political, social, and economic equality to men. This includes seeking to set up equal opportunities for women in education and employment.
Contrary to the definition Antoinette is a lonely and bitter individual who has deprived of parental love her entire life. Mr. Mason, her father was a drunkard, has many children and mistresses. Mrs. Mason, her mother who does not show much motherly affection and ends up getting crazy after the death of her only son who was also the one who signed away her inheritance to Mr. Rochester.
From a liberal view we can clearly see that Mr. Rochester did more harm than good to Antoinette from the way he speaks of her refusal of marriage as ‘her effort to escape’ (p. 90). This suggests that Antoinette finds patriarchal homes to be restricting or somewhat dangerous. However not too long after their marriage, he tells her ‘You are safe’ (p. 93) which was far from the truth because Antoinette is exposed to abuse at …show more content…

116). She suggests that Antoinette assume a new gender role, take action and become her own defender. While she has a legal right to Grandbois which is her family’s property, a legal right that was denied women in the mid-Victorian period, the depiction of Rochester’s appropriation of Antoinette’s familial home draws on the violent overtones in Charlotte Brontë’s novel to explore issues of gender and domesticity that still resonate for Rhys in the 1960s, a time of abandoning and reinhabiting domestic space 27 renewed interest in

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