Charlotte Brontë's seminal work, Jane Eyre, is not only a classic of Victorian literature, but it also contains fascinating elements of Gothic fiction. Published, the novel tells the story of an orphan girl, Jane, who grows up to become a governess and falls in love with her employer, Mr. Rochester. Throughout the novel, several gothics. Charlotte submitted Jane Eyre, which caught the attention of George Smith, and appeared at breakneck speed in three volumes, edited by Currer Bell. The first American edition, of. Charlotte Bront, the British novelist best known for Jane Eyre, was born in Thornton, a small village in West Yorkshire, England. She was born into a clerical family, I love her · Vox. Jane Eyre is prickly, judgmental and completely unsympathetic. I love it. From left, Anne, Emily and Charlotte Bront, by Branwell Bront, 1834. Constance Grady is a. Abstract. Jane Eyre endlessly fascinates readers and scholars with its fairy tale echoes, but Charlotte Bront also wrote this novel as the story of her own mythmaking about two fairies: Jane and Edward Rochester, because only lands fairy tales of fantasy and daydreaming could empower an unprotected woman in the Victorian era. This is the personality of Jane Eyre. The portrait of the heroine Jane Eyre is one of Charlotte Brontë's greatest achievements in the field of English fiction. Jane Eyre was brought to life before us in the pages of the novel and the manner in which the account of her life and actions was written by the author would leave an indelible mark, Jane Eyre. Charlotte Brontë. Random House Publishing Group, - Fiction - Introduction by Joyce Carol Oates • Nominated as one of America's best-loved novels by PBS's The Great American Read Originally published under the pseudonym Currer Bell, Charlotte Bront's Jane Eyre made irruption on the summary. Although often considered subversive toward religion, Charlotte Bront's Jane Eyre 1847 uses understated biblical language and allusions to present a dissident feminist historicist hermeneutic. As the daughter of the Reverend Patrick Bront, Charlotte's spiritual outlook is particularly important but overlooked due to her use of,