Thursday, June 4, 2020
Education in Jane Eyre and Mrs. Warrens Profession - Literature Essay Samples
With the advent of sophisticated industrial machinery and colonialism on a grand scale in previously unheard lands during the Victorian period came a thirst for knowledge. Accordingly, the purpose and value of education, which involved the acquisition of knowledge and the inculcation of social values, was a major concern of Victorian writers. By examining Charlotte Brontà «Ã¢â¬â¢s Jane Eyre and George Bernard Shawââ¬â¢s Mrs Warrenââ¬â¢s Profession, this essay will examine three areas of similarity between the authorsââ¬â¢ views of education. Both texts portray education as an avenue to increased social respectability. However, both texts also view this respectability as a mask for hypocrisy. Both texts also portray education as an avenue for perpetuating gender inequality. Education was viewed as a pathway for the individual to acquire greater respectability in the eyes of society. This was because education was seen to impart the discretion and intellectual prowess necessary to interact with men and women of higher social status. This perception is masterfully demonstrated by Shaw in the polemic between Mrs Warren and Vivie. Vivie is stunned when her mother tells her that she is ââ¬Ëtaught wrong on purposeââ¬â¢ and her mother elaborates in response that Vivie was ââ¬Ëtaught at school and college to think right and properââ¬â¢ but this ââ¬Ëis only a pretence, to keep the cowardly slavish common run of people quiet.ââ¬â¢ Here, Shawââ¬â¢s polemic reminds audiences of the way in which discretion is used to avoid offending society. Education thus uses this ââ¬Ëright and properââ¬â¢ thought to teach an individual discretion which engenders respect. Evidently, however, Shaw is sceptical about this ââ¬Ëpretenceââ¬â¢ of respect ability, which hypocritically disguises social ills. Thus, Shaw exposes the hypocrisy of Victorian education even as he admits that it trains individuals to be respectable members of society. Similarly, Jane Eyre presents education as a tool to acquire a questionable social respectability. Instead of using polemic, Brontà «Ã¢â¬â¢s first person narrative juxtaposes Mr. Brocklehurstââ¬â¢s treatment of Lowoodââ¬â¢s women with his treatment of his own daughters to draw out the hypocritical nature of education. Mrs Reed does ââ¬Ëâ⬠quite approveâ⬠ââ¬â¢ of how ââ¬Ëâ⬠quiet and plainââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬ the girls look, almost like ââ¬Ëâ⬠poor peopleââ¬â¢sââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬ children. This dialogue reveals that the education of women is intended to help them become respectable by cultivating modesty. However, Mr Brocklehurstââ¬â¢s daughters themselves wear clothes ââ¬Ëtrimmed with ermine,ââ¬â¢ a royal material, and ââ¬Ëfalse French curls.ââ¬â¢ Brontà «Ã¢â¬â¢s apt choice of the word ââ¬Ëfalseââ¬â¢ calls the readerââ¬â¢s attention to the falsity of Brocklehurstââ¬â¢s purported belief in modesty for the poor girls of Lowood. It is false because he is perfectly fine with his genteel daughters wearing extravagant clothes. This suggests that men of power like Brocklehurst use education to teach the poor that modesty is respectable, so that they would not aspire to the success of gentility and wealthy society. Hence, Jane Eyre shows that the ââ¬Ërespectabilityââ¬â¢ of education is often used to create a false consciousness of subservience in poor or common people. This echoes Shawââ¬â¢s earlier message. Hence, education in the Victorian era was a means to promoting respectability which in fact was intended to mask class and material inequity. Similarly, both texts portray education as a mask for gender inequality. In the eyes of both Shaw and Brontà «, education serves to justify and perpetuate the superior status of men over women. In Mrs Warrenââ¬â¢s Profession, Vivie makes sharp and sardonic commentary on the inequality perpetuated by education. For instance, Vivie responds to Praed that his idea of ââ¬Ëmaidenly reserveââ¬â¢ is a ââ¬Ëfrightful waste of timeâ⬠¦ Especially womenââ¬â¢s time.ââ¬â¢ This sardonic commentary spoken by Vivie is Shawââ¬â¢s critique of societyââ¬â¢s view of educated women as modest and reserved. To him, this limits their potential. In the play, this idea is reinforced by the social backdrop of Vivie ââ¬Ëtieingââ¬â¢ with the Third Wrangler at Cambridge but ironically being unable to replace him because she is a woman. This demonstrates the glass ceiling placed by the education system on women. Similarly, the inequality perpetuated by education is critiqued by Br ontà «Ã¢â¬â¢s use of the introspective narrator. Jane silently rebels against the barrier society places on her knowledge. Her thoughts that it is ââ¬Ënarrow mindedâ⬠¦to say that they ought toââ¬â¢ be confined to ââ¬Ëmaking puddings and knitting stockingsââ¬â¢ instead of learning ââ¬Ëmore than custom has pronounced necessary for their sexââ¬â¢ has two effects. First, it directly critiques the limits on womenââ¬â¢s education. Second, the introspective narration demonstrates that women are sufficiently intelligent to critique the system and desire more intellectual growth than it can provide. By giving the reader greater insight into Janeââ¬â¢s thoughts, Brontà « thus caricatures the standard justifications for societyââ¬â¢s lowly education of women. Hence, both texts view education as a perpetuator of gender inequality. In conclusion, Jane Eyre and Mrs Warrenââ¬â¢s Profession both view education as a means to social respectability. However, they also portray education as a mask for hypocrisy and a purveyor of gender inequality. It tells us much about the nature of the Victorian period that two texts separated by a few decades continue to portray the same message about education.
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