

Charlotte Bronte, who wrote Jane Eyre, was a great British female novelist. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves. Comparing Charlotte Brontes Jane Eyre And Wide Sargasso Sea. Bertha Mason is the madwoman in the attic she is the raving lunatic that is Rochesters first wife in Jane Eyre,but have you ever stopped to wonder what her. These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. Bertha has gripped the imagination of reader and novelist far beyond the power of a gothic mystery. 2 But Jane Eyre has inspired and even stranger set of progeny, mothered not by Jane Eyre Rochester herself but rather by Bertha Mason Rochester, the mad wife confined to the upper rooms of Thornfield Hall. 1 In the 137 years since its publication, homage has been paid Jane Eyre in numerous ways: motion picture and television adaptations, musical compositions, ballets, not to mention a continuous stream of comments by other novelists. Both pieces present different types of isolation, such as isolation due to location and the isolation of a character due to their social status, such as Jane. This theme is also developed in The Wide Sargasso Sea, by Jean Rhys. The theme of isolation is explored in Bronte’s novel Jane Eyre. Not only has this novel had a clear and major. In 1978, 313 000 individuals visited the Brontë Parsonage in Haworth-five times as many as visited Shakespeare’s birthplace in Stratford-upon-Avon-to see, to muse over, and perhaps to ‘gloom about’ the house of Charlotte, Emily, Anne, and Branwell Brontë, many of them drawn by their love of Wuthering Heights but perhaps even more because of their familiarity with Jane Eyre. Isolation in Jane Eyre and the Wide Sargasso Sea. The popularity and influence of Charlotte Bronts Jane Eyre is difficult to overestimate.
