Power-play in “Jane Eyre” and “Wide Sargasso Sea”: Confinement and Discipline

  • Priyanjana Das
  • Show Author Details
  • Priyanjana Das

    Student at University of Edinburg, UK

  • img Download Full Paper

Abstract

Nineteenth century England saw women as creatures vulnerable to mental illness owing to their biological framework. Hysteria, which developed a steady medical interest during that period, was a term that became socially demeaning because it was used to describe women who embraced their sexual freedom, were susceptible to temptation and had ‘fallen’ too far beyond the protection of a society. The Victorian society aspired to build itself the ‘good woman’, enmeshed within its stringent laws and unyielding patriarchal aspirations; and, in doing so, confine the ‘uncontrolled sexual energies’ of the ‘hysterical’ woman in asylums. My close reading analysis and comparative study would explore the narrative and authoritative structures through which power structures attempt to confine, censure and discipline Antoinette Cosway or Bertha Mason in Charlotte Bronte’s canonical text ‘Jane Eyre’ (1847) as well as in Jean Rhys’ counter narrative ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’ (1966).

Type

Research Paper

Information

International Journal of Law Management and Humanities, Volume 6, Issue 5, Page 2020 - 2026

DOI: https://doij.org/10.10000/IJLMH.115983

Creative Commons

This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution -NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits remixing, adapting, and building upon the work for non-commercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.

Copyright

Copyright © IJLMH 2021