求《简爱》读后感(英文)100字不要太难的
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《简爱》英文读后感
Another interesting aspect of the novel is the character Bertha Mason. Bronte herself, alluding to the latest developments in Victorian psychiatric theory, attributed Bertha’s behavior to “moral madness” (qtd. in Showalter 73). Women were thought to be more susceptible to such disorders. Sexual appetite was considered one of the chief symptoms of moral insanity in women; it was subject to severe sanctions and was regarded as abnormal or pathological. According to Showalter, the periodicity of Bertha’s attack suggests a connection to the menstrual cycle, which many Victorian physicians understood as a system for the control of female sexuality. Rochester’s complicity in the destruction of his wife’s spirit is indicated in Jane’s recognition of the third story’s resemblance to a corridor in “Blubeard’s castle” (Bronte 138). In trying to persuade her to become his mistress, Rochester asks, “If you were mad, do you think I should hate you?” “I do indeed, sir,” Jane replies, and she is surely right (Bronte 328). Bertha’s death, “the purging of the lusts of the flesh,” must precede any successful union between Rochester and Jane. When they finally marry, they become equals, “not only because Rochester, in losing his hand and his sight, has leaned how it feels to be helpless and how to accept help, but also because Jane, in destroying the dark passion of her own psyche, has become truly her ‘own mistress’” (Showalter 75).
As a conclusion, Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre is unambiguously one of the most well written novels with profound themes. It has influenced generations of readers, appealing to both children and adults, women and men.
Another interesting aspect of the novel is the character Bertha Mason. Bronte herself, alluding to the latest developments in Victorian psychiatric theory, attributed Bertha’s behavior to “moral madness” (qtd. in Showalter 73). Women were thought to be more susceptible to such disorders. Sexual appetite was considered one of the chief symptoms of moral insanity in women; it was subject to severe sanctions and was regarded as abnormal or pathological. According to Showalter, the periodicity of Bertha’s attack suggests a connection to the menstrual cycle, which many Victorian physicians understood as a system for the control of female sexuality. Rochester’s complicity in the destruction of his wife’s spirit is indicated in Jane’s recognition of the third story’s resemblance to a corridor in “Blubeard’s castle” (Bronte 138). In trying to persuade her to become his mistress, Rochester asks, “If you were mad, do you think I should hate you?” “I do indeed, sir,” Jane replies, and she is surely right (Bronte 328). Bertha’s death, “the purging of the lusts of the flesh,” must precede any successful union between Rochester and Jane. When they finally marry, they become equals, “not only because Rochester, in losing his hand and his sight, has leaned how it feels to be helpless and how to accept help, but also because Jane, in destroying the dark passion of her own psyche, has become truly her ‘own mistress’” (Showalter 75).
As a conclusion, Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre is unambiguously one of the most well written novels with profound themes. It has influenced generations of readers, appealing to both children and adults, women and men.
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This is a story about a special and unreserved woman who has been exposed to a hostile environment but continuously and fearlessly struggling for her ideal life. The story can be interpreted as a symbol of the independent spirit.
I don’t know what others feel, but frankly speaking, I would rather regard the section that Jane began her teaching job in Thornfield as the film’s end----especially when I heard Jane’s words “Never in my life have I been awaken so happily.” For one thing, this ideal and brand-new beginning of life was what Jane had been imagining for long as a suffering person; for another, this should be what the audiences with my views hoped her to get. But the professional judgment of producing films reminded me to wait for a totally different result: There must be something wrong coming with the excellence----perhaps not only should another section be added to enrich the story, but also we may see from the next transition of Jane’s life that “Life is like a box of chocolates, you never know what you would get.”
I don’t know what others feel, but frankly speaking, I would rather regard the section that Jane began her teaching job in Thornfield as the film’s end----especially when I heard Jane’s words “Never in my life have I been awaken so happily.” For one thing, this ideal and brand-new beginning of life was what Jane had been imagining for long as a suffering person; for another, this should be what the audiences with my views hoped her to get. But the professional judgment of producing films reminded me to wait for a totally different result: There must be something wrong coming with the excellence----perhaps not only should another section be added to enrich the story, but also we may see from the next transition of Jane’s life that “Life is like a box of chocolates, you never know what you would get.”
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