This essay explores the function of setting in Jane Eyre, arguing how Bronte used the setting to reflect how women can go beyond the limitations of their gender, and social class and find fulfilment. To deliberate these points in detail, the settings at Gateshead, and Thornfield will be closely assessed. In addition, it will consider how the Gothic imagination of the protagonist emphasised the feminist issues of the era, to reflect that it was not necessary for a woman to feel trapped within a patriarchal
Dracula Essay (Topic #4) Novels portrayed by fear, horror, death and mystery are said to be gothic. The genre was originated in the 17th century, but wasn’t popularized until the 18th century when “Frankenstein” by Mary Shelley was published in 1818. Another well-known gothic novel is “Dracula” by Bram Stoker. It follows the battle between Dracula,a vampire and a group of men and women trying to stop him from spreading the “un-dead” curse. It’s the ultimate battle between good and evil. “Dracula”
Woman: God’s second mistake? Friedrich Nietzsche, a German philosopher, who regarded ‘thirst for power’ as the sole driving force of all human actions, has many a one-liners to his credit. ‘Woman was God’s second mistake’, he declared. Unmindful of the reactionary scathing criticism and shrill abuses he invited for himself, especially from the ever-irritable feminist brigade. The fact and belief that God never ever commits a mistake, brings Nietzsche’s proclamation dashingly down into the dust bin