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The Sexual Politics of Jane Eyre
Cód:
491_9781913087258
Very few new books have the power to change our view of a great classic like Jane Eyre. But this is such a book. It offers a genuinely new way of reading the novel.It offers a radical rethinking that differs from previous explorations of Jane Eyre from both feminist and post-colonial positions.Dr. Erskine is well acquainted with a wide range of relevant literary criticism and she challenges in particular the dominant feminist argument that Jane is primarily motivated by rage. She provides a close reading of Jane Eyre from a new perspective, namely that Jane is from the beginning motivated by fear - and specifically by fear of sexual subjugation. Her analysis of the text clearly supports her proposition that the child Janes occasional outbursts of anger and retaliation are a last resort when she is goaded beyond endurance, but that her primary reaction to the world is one of fear. This is a direct challenge to what has become a feminist orthodoxy in literary criticism, namely that Jane is intrinsically a rebellious character primarily motivated by rage. This reading is much better supported by the text than the more dominant reading of Jane as rebellious from the start. Dr. Erskine argues that Jane should be seen as a timid, fearful child who, as a mature woman, overcomes fear and rebels against oppressive societal structures. This contrasts with prevailing feminist depictions of Jane Eyre as a feisty, rebellious child who, as an adult, subsides into a patriarchal marriage. This alternative perspective provides a reading of the novels conclusion as more aesthetically satisfactory and unified than many previous scholars have proposed.  Dr. Erskine supports her arguments by close and pertinent quotation from the text, and by details of the novels cultural and historical context which, again, are not often remarked on. In particular she emphasizes that Janes reference
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