Please Follow the given requirements to write Working BibliographyThe Bibliography should be based on references given in two papers attached. Each reference should correspond to each entry. Here are step-to-step guidelines to create one entryAnnotating a bibliography…encourages you to think critically about the content of the works you are using, their place within a field of study, and their relation to your own research and ideas.proves you have read and understand your sources.establishes your work as a valid source and you as a competent researcher.situates your study and topic in a continuing professional conversation.provides a way for others to decide whether a source will be helpful to their research.For Our Purposes:Sentence 1 (must be one sentence):Name of authorHis or her credentials“argues that ______” or “surveys the field of _____” etc. + thesis or main purposeSentence 2 (possibly 2 sentences for longer/complex works):Refined statement of the progression of the argument – this will somewhat restate the thesis at times, but it should explain how the texts argument proceeds, what ground it covers, maybe including a note about its method or approachSentence 3 (possibly 2 sentences):Example or citation of the type of sources it utilizes or referencesand/or its relation to a broader field of discourseand/or its relationship to your project (if on a larger list)Sentence 4:What type of readers will find this useful – don’t bother stating the obvious, be specific: what interests will this work satisfy? what needs will it address within a larger project?and/or the context in which this text appeared (especially for chapters in a book or articles)Sample entry:Wright, Will. “Introduction: The Hero in Popular Stories.” Journal of Popular Film andTelevision 32.4 (2005): 146-148.Wright, a professor of sociology and author of several books on popular stories, argues that heroes should not be defined exclusively by any particular cultural moment or critical interest because we might then overlook what heroes across cultures share. To support his argument, Wright reminds us that the very structure of language down to basic grammar implies a narrative where human actions change situations – the first ingredient for heroism. Wright’s purpose in this brief introduction is to address the cultural specificity of heroes identified in subsequent essays, while reminding readers that each of these hero shares certain generic characteristics such as activism and decisiveness. The article is especially geared toward readers of the journal who might get lost in the “transient issues of cultural fashion” when reading about a nontraditional hero such as the Eurasian female kickboxing anthropologist, Sydney Fox.
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3/16/2019
RIP Project – Google Docs
Yiyu Qian
Emily Wells
RIP Project / Writing 39B
25 February 2019
Book Review of Jane Eyre
The past two century writings or rather the authors of that period’s controversial
and prominent topic were feminism and gender-related issues. The author’s true
definition of feminism is “the doctrine advocating women’s social, political, civil,
educational and all other rights as equal to those of men” (Bronte 138). The beguilement
over the subject can be seen in the work of William Shakespeare’s Macbeth and the
Prejudice or even Jane Austen’s Pride. Jane Eyre, the central character in Jane Eyre by
Charlotte Bronte, discovers the profundity at which women may play in the society and
uncovers her precincts in Victorian England. There is a bounteous amount of proof that
can show that the Character of Jane Eyre is, of course, the feminist one which can be
related to modern women. Gender issues have been quite a debatable issue in every
society every century, and so does feminism. The fact that women are often mistreated is
dependent on their reluctance to fight for their freedom.
Female often feel they are not equal to their male counterparts, an issue that
should no longer exist in modern society. As evident in the past century novels like Jane
Eyre, the central character is faced with significant difficulties in addition to her social
and economic condition. “Jane Eyre and the personal politics of space,” which revisits
Jane’s journey through the various houses, spaces, and places in her story from the point
of view of her growth” (Gates 137). The main character shows a strong fighting spirit and
can stand out for whatever she feels she deserves, and any judgment or punishment she
feels is unfair. The author portrays the character not to be attractive and poor but tells the
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1f3e0zOC_U2xIDAfCZkzKcL20mLagGh5pFmTCKJyyg0E/edit
1/3
3/16/2019
RIP Project – Google Docs
man she loves that they have the same soul and heart and therefore he should not think of
her to be heartless. Men rule the society she lives in, and the treatment she receives from
the headmaster is cruel, but she endures and stands out for her freedom. Jane can lash out
to her aunt from the beginning of the novel when she feels that the punishment she has
received is not fair. In the writer’s own words, “It is her grittiness that saves her at
Lowood School, where punishments are meted out unfairly and girls are sent to starve
and sicken. Helen, who meekly accepts unjust punishments, dies. Jane survives because
she does not” (Jong 152).
Despite the character’s miserable life, she is satisfied with it but feels that all
women should be equally treated like their male counterparts since they all suffer the
same problems as the men suffer. “Over the past thirty years, and as a result of the
women’s movement, gender issues have become entangled with issues of language” (Von
Flotow, 2016). She relates her feeling of suffering and hatred and thinks that all women
deserve better and fair judgment the same way as men, even though it can be shown that
feminism and gender-related issues have significantly reduced over recent years women
should be responsible for its eradication.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1f3e0zOC_U2xIDAfCZkzKcL20mLagGh5pFmTCKJyyg0E/edit
2/3
3/16/2019
RIP Project – Google Docs
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1f3e0zOC_U2xIDAfCZkzKcL20mLagGh5pFmTCKJyyg0E/edit
3/3
3/16/2019
RIP Essay – Google Docs
Yiyu Qian
Emily Wells
RIP Essay / Writing 39B
9 March 2019
Book Review of Jane Eyre
Although in the current modern society, men and women may have the same
rights and privileges, there are specific gender issues like motherhood, domestic violence,
sexual discrimination and equal pay which may still lead to the rise of person’s interest.
The attitude towards the feminist point of view has today changed and has significantly
evolved compared to the Victorian period. The issues of feminism are still debatable in
the modern era. Economic, social and political inequality between men and women are
very vital matters for the contemporary world. The novel Jane Eyre may be deemed as a
Bildungsroman or romance novel, a psychological or gothic novel. The book can as well
be analyzed from the feminist point of view considering the important statement on
matters to women presented in Victorian society. The genre is crucial in conveying the
message to the audience in a way that it explains to the gender issues and feminism in
Victorian society.
I realize that the central character Jane is portrayed to be satisfied by the kind of
life she is living although she does not have any means to travel which is her greatest
regrets. Relating her feeling to all women not only the women of her class and claims that
all women should be generally calm but instead feel the same way men think. In the
novel. I find that the main character Jane says that women require a field worth their
effort and exercise for their faculties the same way that the men do since they suffer from
too unequivocal a stagnation or too rigid a restraint exactly the as men would endure. She
claims that it is not fit for men or somewhat more privileged creatures, as would she
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1d5w3G4DyKUD-J-XFPXx5HGAPTK-_wcnFzwETBbyH9V0/edit
1/4
3/16/2019
RIP Essay – Google Docs
would refer to them to say that women should curb themselves to knitting stockings,
making pudding, to embroidering bags and playing the piano. Bertha, on the other hand,
is a character that is portrayed by the author to be resisting though she is, of course, a
female character. The manner at which the character is portrayed makes Jane has less
sympathy for her. Although she is a woman, she is referred to like it, and the manner that
Jane describes their meeting with Bertha is surely not meeting with a human being but an
animal. “Although Wide Sargasso Sea appeared as a prequel of Jane Eyre, Rhys
presented a more advancing and radical feminist thought in Wide Sargasso Sea, and
Bertha Mason is a typical representation of woman as victim of both patriarchy and
colonialism (Jiang, 2018).
The central character is born and thrives in a society where the likelihood of
Jane’s success is put to measure according to the degree of her marriageability. The
author describes Jane to be less attractive in the aspect of beauty and moreover; she is an
orphan. Her interest is not drawn to just marriage as compared to the other women’s
attention that is of her age. Jane’s primary aim is to preserve her freedom and identity in a
society governed by the male creatures. Due to these distinctions of interest like other
women despite her gender, she has the courage of standing out and demanding her right
at any time that she feels that she has been unfairly treated be it her aunt, the boy she is in
love with or her headmaster. From the very start of the novel, the central character can
stand out to her aunt when she feels that her punishment is unfair. After talking to Lloyd,
she says, “They are not fit to associate with me, ” which she refers to Georgiana, Eliza
and John who are told not to associate with her (Bronte 23) .
Feminism is again proven by Jane when she does not downgrade herself to
Rochester in regards to the spiritual qualities despite being less than a member of the
family. Eyre insists that she is more compared to her social status and asks her boyfriend
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1d5w3G4DyKUD-J-XFPXx5HGAPTK-_wcnFzwETBbyH9V0/edit
2/4
3/16/2019
RIP Essay – Google Docs
whether he thinks she is heartless and soulless because she is little, ugly, obscure and
poor. She tells him he is wrong and since they have the same soul and the full hearts. In
her own words she says, “Do you think I can stay to become nothing to you? Do you
think I am an automaton? a machine without feelings? and can bear to have my morsel of
bread snatched from my lips, and my drop of living water dashed from my cup? Do you
think, because I am poor, obscure, plain, and little, I am soulless and heartless? You think
wrong!–I have as much soul as you,–and full as much heart! And if God had gifted me
with some beauty and much wealth, I should have made it as hard for you to leave me, as
it is now for me to leave you. I am not talking to you now through the medium of custom,
conventionalities, nor even of mortal flesh; –it is my spirit that addresses your spirit; just
as if both had passed through the grave, and we stood at God’s feet, equal, –as we are!”
(Bronte, 13)
Gender issues and feminism is quite evident from the sexual discrimination,
social, political and economic inequality, equal pay, motherhood and domestic violence
presented by the author through the central character Jane Eyre. Despite the difficulty and
challenges that comes before her, she struggles to become independent even though she
regrets lacking some privileges that the more privileged creatures have though she feels
they should all be equally treated. Her stand for fair treatment any time she feels
unevenly treated has proven how strong she is and just what every woman in modern
society should embrace. “Jane Eyre centers woman as the second sex under the
domination of men. Woman autonomy is a part of gender issues which becomes a
concern of feminist. Descriptive qualitative method through library research was used in
this research by applying a feminist literary approach” (Awaliah, 108).
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1d5w3G4DyKUD-J-XFPXx5HGAPTK-_wcnFzwETBbyH9V0/edit
3/4
3/16/2019
RIP Essay – Google Docs
Work Cited Page
Awaliah, I. M. (2017). Gender Issues in Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre. ETERNAL
(English, Teaching, Learning, and Research Journal), 3(1), 107-117.
Jiang, Q. (2018, June). A Comparative Study of Bertha Mason in “Jane Eyre” and “Wide
Sargasso Sea” from a Feminist Perspective. In 2018 3rd International Conference on
Humanities Science, Management and Education Technology (HSMET 2018). Atlantis
Press.
Brontë, C. (2016). Jane Eyre (Norton Critical Editions). WW Norton & Company.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1d5w3G4DyKUD-J-XFPXx5HGAPTK-_wcnFzwETBbyH9V0/edit
4/4
3/16/2019
RIP Project – Google Docs
Yiyu Qian
Emily Wells
RIP Project / Writing 39B
25 February 2019
Book Review of Jane Eyre
The past two century writings or rather the authors of that period’s controversial
and prominent topic were feminism and gender-related issues. The author’s true
definition of feminism is “the doctrine advocating women’s social, political, civil,
educational and all other rights as equal to those of men” (Bronte 138). The beguilement
over the subject can be seen in the work of William Shakespeare’s Macbeth and the
Prejudice or even Jane Austen’s Pride. Jane Eyre, the central character in Jane Eyre by
Charlotte Bronte, discovers the profundity at which women may play in the society and
uncovers her precincts in Victorian England. There is a bounteous amount of proof that
can show that the Character of Jane Eyre is, of course, the feminist one which can be
related to modern women. Gender issues have been quite a debatable issue in every
society every century, and so does feminism. The fact that women are often mistreated is
dependent on their reluctance to fight for their freedom.
Female often feel they are not equal to their male counterparts, an issue that
should no longer exist in modern society. As evident in the past century novels like Jane
Eyre, the central character is faced with significant difficulties in addition to her social
and economic condition. “Jane Eyre and the personal politics of space,” which revisits
Jane’s journey through the various houses, spaces, and places in her story from the point
of view of her growth” (Gates 137). The main character shows a strong fighting spirit and
can stand out for whatever she feels she deserves, and any judgment or punishment she
feels is unfair. The author portrays the character not to be attractive and poor but tells the
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1f3e0zOC_U2xIDAfCZkzKcL20mLagGh5pFmTCKJyyg0E/edit
1/3
3/16/2019
RIP Project – Google Docs
man she loves that they have the same soul and heart and therefore he should not think of
her to be heartless. Men rule the society she lives in, and the treatment she receives from
the headmaster is cruel, but she endures and stands out for her freedom. Jane can lash out
to her aunt from the beginning of the novel when she feels that the punishment she has
received is not fair. In the writer’s own words, “It is her grittiness that saves her at
Lowood School, where punishments are meted out unfairly and girls are sent to starve
and sicken. Helen, who meekly accepts unjust punishments, dies. Jane survives because
she does not” (Jong 152).
Despite the character’s miserable life, she is satisfied with it but feels that all
women should be equally treated like their male counterparts since they all suffer the
same problems as the men suffer. “Over the past thirty years, and as a result of the
women’s movement, gender issues have become entangled with issues of language” (Von
Flotow, 2016). She relates her feeling of suffering and hatred and thinks that all women
deserve better and fair judgment the same way as men, even though it can be shown that
feminism and gender-related issues have significantly reduced over recent years women
should be responsible for its eradication.
References
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1f3e0zOC_U2xIDAfCZkzKcL20mLagGh5pFmTCKJyyg0E/edit
2/3
3/16/2019
RIP Project – Google Docs
Awaliah, I. M. (2017). Gender Issues in Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre. ETERNAL
(English, Teaching, Learning, and Research Journal), 3(1), 107-117.
Jiang, Q. (2018, June). A Comparative Study of Bertha Mason in “Jane Eyre” and
“Wide Sargasso Sea” from a Feminist Perspective. In 2018 3rd
International Conference on Humanities Science, Management and
Education Technology (HSMET 2018). Atlantis Press.
Brontë, C. (2016). Jane Eyre (Norton Critical Editions). WW Norton & Company.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1f3e0zOC_U2xIDAfCZkzKcL20mLagGh5pFmTCKJyyg0E/edit
3/3
3/16/2019
RIP Essay – Google Docs
Yiyu Qian
Emily Wells
RIP Essay / Writing 39B
9 March 2019
Book Review of Jane Eyre
Although in the current modern society, men and women may have the same
rights and privileges, there are specific gender issues like motherhood, domestic violence,
sexual discrimination and equal pay which may still lead to the rise of person’s interest.
The attitude towards the feminist point of view has today changed and has significantly
evolved compared to the Victorian period. The issues of feminism are still debatable in
the modern era. Economic, social and political inequality between men and women are
very vital matters for the contemporary world. The novel Jane Eyre may be deemed as a
Bildungsroman or romance novel, a psychological or gothic novel. The book can as well
be analyzed from the feminist point of view considering the important statement on
matters to women presented in Victorian society. The genre is crucial in conveying the
message to the audience in a way that it explains to the gender issues and feminism in
Victorian society.
I realize that the central character Jane is portrayed to be satisfied by the kind of
life she is living although she does not have any means to travel which is her greatest
regrets. Relating her feeling to all women not only the women of her class and claims that
all women should be generally calm but instead feel the same way men think. In the
novel. I find that the main character Jane says that women require a field worth their
effort and exercise for their faculties the same way that the men do since they suffer from
too unequivocal a stagnation or too rigid a restraint exactly the as men would endure. She
claims that it is not fit for men or somewhat more privileged creatures, as would she
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1d5w3G4DyKUD-J-XFPXx5HGAPTK-_wcnFzwETBbyH9V0/edit
1/4
3/16/2019
RIP Essay – Google Docs
would refer to them to say that women should curb themselves to knitting stockings,
making pudding, to embroidering bags and playing the piano. Bertha, on the other hand,
is a character that is portrayed by the author to be resisting though she is, of course, a
female character. The manner at which the character is portrayed makes Jane has less
sympathy for her. Although she is a woman, she is referred to like it, and the manner that
Jane describes their meeting with Bertha is surely not meeting with a human being but an
animal. “Although Wide Sargasso Sea appeared as a prequel of Jane Eyre, Rhys
presented a more advancing and radical feminist thought in Wide Sargasso Sea, and
Bertha Mason is a typical representation of woman as victim of both patriarchy and
colonialism (Jiang, 2018).
The central character is born and thrives in a society where the likelihood of
Jane’s success is put to measure according to the degree of her marriageability. The
author describes Jane to be less attractive in the aspect of beauty and moreover; she is an
orphan. Her interest is not drawn to just marriage as compared to the other women’s
attention that is of her age. Jane’s primary aim is to preserve her freedom and identity in a
society governed by the male creatures. Due to these distinctions of interest like other
women despite her gender, she has the courage of standing out and demanding her right
at any time that she feels that she has been unfairly treated be it her aunt, the boy she is in
love with or her headmaster. From the very start of the novel, the central character can
stand out to her aunt when she feels that her punishment is unfair. After talking to Lloyd,
she says, “They are not fit to associate with me, ” which she refers to Georgiana, Eliza
and John who are told not to associate with her (Bronte 23) .
Feminism is again proven by Jane when she does not downgrade herself to
Rochester in regards to the spiritual qualities despite being less than a member of the
family. Eyre insists that she is more compared to her social status and asks her boyfriend
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1d5w3G4DyKUD-J-XFPXx5HGAPTK-_wcnFzwETBbyH9V0/edit
2/4
3/16/2019
RIP Essay – Google Docs
whether he thinks she is heartless and soulless because she is little, ugly, obscure and
poor. She tells him he is wrong and since they have the same soul and the full hearts. In
her own words she says, “Do you think I can stay to become nothing to you? Do you
think I am an automaton? a machine without feelings? and can bear to have my morsel of
bread snatched from my lips, and my drop of living water dashed from my cup? Do you
think, because I am poor, obscure, plain, and little, I am soulless and heartless? You think
wrong!–I have as much soul as you,–and full as much heart! And if God had gifted me
with some beauty and much wealth, I should have made it as hard for you to leave me, as
it is now for me to leave you. I am not talking to you now through the medium of custom,
conventionalities, nor even of mortal flesh; –it is my spirit that addresses your spirit; just
as if both had passed through the grave, and we stood at God’s feet, equal, –as we are!”
(Bronte, 13)
Gender issues and feminism is quite evident from the sexual discrimination,
social, political and economic inequality, equal pay, motherhood and domestic violence
presented by the author through the central character Jane Eyre. Despite the difficulty and
challenges that comes before her, she struggles to become independent even though she
regrets lacking some privileges that the more privileged creatures have though she feels
they should all be equally treated. Her stand for fair treatment any time she feels
unevenly treated has proven how strong she is and just what every woman in …
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