Premium Content Treatment of the Independant Female in The Portrait of a Lady and Jane Eyre
By Anonymous - February 24, 2004
Assignment: Discuss the treatment of female independence and the independent heroine in two Victorian novels.
Jane Eyre, by Charlotte Bronte, and The Portrait of a Lady, by Henry James, both utilise the Victorian convention of the orphaned heroine that is forced to find her own way in the world. Treatment of female independence and the independent…
This excerpt of the essay is provided for free. To read the complete essay of 3350 words or to get access to our full library of Literature Essays, please subscribe below or log in if you are already subscribed.
Join Now - Choose a Membership Level
GradeSaver provides access to quizzes, 2862 literature essays, 833 sample college application essays and ad-free surfing in this premium content, "Members Only" section of the site! Membership includes a 10% discount on all editing orders.
We have been mentioned in the Washington Post, the Economist, and many other papers around the world for our exceptional essays. GradeSaver has reviewed each essay for quality; these essays are the very best on the Internet and many have been written by students of Ivy League colleges.
| 3-Day Trial (recurring) | $2.95 * |
| 30-Day Trial (recurring) | $6.95 * |
| 1 Month Membership (one-time charge) | $12.95 |
| 12 Month Membership (one-time charge) | $49.95 |
* After your trial period, you will be billed a monthly fee of $6.95 with the option to cancel at any time. Questions? Read our FAQ.
Existing Users
Jane Eyre Essays and Related Content
- Jane Eyre: Study Guide
- Jane Eyre: Major Themes
- Jane Eyre: E-Text
- Jane Eyre: Questions
- Jane Eyre: Purchase the Novel and Related Material
- Charlotte Bronte: Biography
- Jane Eyre: The Independent and Successful Woman Of the Nineteenth Century
- Mystery and Suspense
- In Search of Permanence
- Jane's Art and Story
- Beauty and the Representation of Authenticity: Women in Jane Eyre
- In Defense of an Ending: St. John and the Role of Destiny in Jane Eyre
- A Life On a Page
- Jane Eyre's Flight From Flight
- Standing Alone: Isolation and Narration in Villette and Jane Eyre
- The Struggles of the Heroines in Wide Sargasso Sea and Jane Eyre
- Women in Literature: Examining Oppression Versus Independence in Henry V and Jane Eyre
- Fire: Destruction and Creation
- Treatment of the Independant Female in The Portrait of a Lady and Jane Eyre
- Jane Eyre: An Uncommon Heroine
- The Unenslaved Self: Feminist Enlightenment in Jane Eyre
- The Impossibility of Standing Alone: Jean Rhys's "Wide Sargasso Sea" in the Context of Bronte's "Jane Eyre"
- A Psychoanalytic Criticism of Emma, Jane Eyre, and Tess of the D'Urbervilles
- Class Structure and Morality in Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre
- Devices Used In Jane Eyre and Aurora Leigh to Represent Female Subjugation
- Surrogate Mother Figures in Jane Eyre
- The Burden of Feminism in Jane Eyre
- Examining Femininity in "Wide Sargasso Sea"
- The Woman at the Door: The Gypsy Scene in Jane Eyre
- Signifiance of Setting in Jane Eyre
- From Madwoman to Rebel: Jean Rhys’s Reinvention of Bertha Mason in Wide Sargasso Sea
- No Net Ensnares Me
