The Madwoman in Attic & Beyond: Contextualizing & Queering Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre

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THE MADWOMAN IN ATTIC & BEYOND

CONTEXTUALIZING & QUEERING CHARLOTTE BRONTË’S JANE EYRE

Lisa Hagerlisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager

Pronouns: she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

The Brontë Sisters (circa 1834)by Patrick Branwell Brontë (1817-1848)

From left to right:Anne Brontë (1820-1849) Emily Brontë (1818-1848)Charlotte Brontë (1816-1855)

To Walk Invisible (starts March 26th on PBS)

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirshttp://www.pbs.org/video/2365970472/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-NKXNThJ610

The Brontë Sisters Power Dolls

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

The Victorian Governess

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

https://www.bl.uk/romantics-and-victorians/articles/the-figure-of-the-governess

• Taught young boys and girls; often taught young women until old enough to go to finishing schools

The Victorian Governess

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

https://www.bl.uk/romantics-and-victorians/articles/the-figure-of-the-governess

• Taught young boys and girls; often taught young women until old enough to go to finishing schools

• Genteel but not wealthy

The Victorian Governess

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

https://www.bl.uk/romantics-and-victorians/articles/the-figure-of-the-governess

• Taught young boys and girls; often taught young women until old enough to go to finishing schools

• Genteel but not wealthy• Required education and social graces

The Victorian Governess

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

https://www.bl.uk/romantics-and-victorians/articles/the-figure-of-the-governess

• Taught young boys and girls; often taught young women until old enough to go to finishing schools

• Genteel but not wealthy• Required education and social graces• One of the few respectable occupations

open to middle-class white women in the British empire

The Victorian Governess

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

https://www.bl.uk/romantics-and-victorians/articles/the-figure-of-the-governess

• Taught young boys and girls; often taught young women until old enough to go to finishing schools

• Genteel but not wealthy• Required education and social graces• One of the few respectable occupations

open to middle-class white women in the British empire

• Required women to live with the family for whom they worked

The Victorian Governess

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

https://www.bl.uk/romantics-and-victorians/articles/the-figure-of-the-governess

• Taught young boys and girls; often taught young women until old enough to go to finishing schools

• Genteel but not wealthy• Required education and social graces• One of the few respectable occupations

open to middle-class white women in the British empire

• Required women to live with the family for whom they worked

• Neither a servant nor a member of the family

The Victorian Governess

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

https://www.bl.uk/romantics-and-victorians/articles/the-figure-of-the-governess

• Taught young boys and girls; often taught young women until old enough to go to finishing schools

• Genteel but not wealthy• Required education and social graces• One of the few respectable occupations

open to middle-class white women in the British empire

• Required women to live with the family for whom they worked

• Neither a servant nor a member of the family

• Men of the family often sexually abused women servants, including governesses

The Victorian Governess

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

https://www.bl.uk/romantics-and-victorians/articles/the-figure-of-the-governess

• Taught young boys and girls; often taught young women until old enough to go to finishing schools

• Genteel but not wealthy• Required education and social graces• One of the few respectable occupations

open to middle-class white women in the British empire

• Required women to live with the family for whom they worked

• Neither a servant nor a member of the family

• Men of the family often sexually abused women servants, including governesses

Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

• Bildungsroman (object -> subject)

Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

• Bildungsroman (object -> subject)

• Focuses on Jane’s internal life

Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

• Bildungsroman (object -> subject)

• Focuses on Jane’s internal life• Critique of women’s limited

options in life

Feminist Analysis of Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

Sandra M. Gilbert & Susan Gubar’s The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination1979

Feminist Analysis of Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

Part IV: The Spectral Selves of Charlotte Brontë

9. A Secret, Inward Wound: The Professor’s Pupil

10. A Dialogue of Self and Soul: Plain Jane’s Progress

11. The Genesis of Hunger, According to Shirley

12. The Buried Life of Lucy Snowe

Queering Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

• What is a queer reading of a text?

Queering Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

• What is a queer reading of a text?• Why would you, as a critical reader of

texts, want to do a queer reading?

Queering Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

• What is a queer reading of a text?• Why would you, as a critical reader of

texts, want to do a queer reading?• What are some problems with queering

nineteenth-century texts?

Queering Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

Queering Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

Discuss one of following questions with your group:

• What kind of relationships do you see between Jane and other women characters? Does Jane does seem to feel romantically attached to these women? What actions and thoughts alert you to this?

OR

• How are Victorian gender roles called into question in this chapter? Are either or both Rochester and Jane doing and/or experiencing things associated with another gender?

Queering Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

1. Jane & Helen: ch. 8 (59-61) & ch. 9 (69-72)

2. Rochester as fortune teller: ch. 19 (172-180)

3. Jane & Bertha: ch. 25 (249-251) & ch. 26 (257-261)

4. Jane & the Rivers Sisters: ch. 30 (307-309)

5. Jane & Rochester @ Ferndean: ch. 37 (380-395)

Queering Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre

lisa.hager@uwc.edu || @lmhager || she, her, hers & they, them, theirs

Discuss one of following questions with your group:

• What kind of relationships do you see between Jane and other women characters? Does Jane does seem to feel romantically attached to these women? What actions and thoughts alert you to this?

OR

• How are Victorian gender roles called into question in this chapter? Are either or both Rochester and Jane doing and/or experiencing things associated with another gender?