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Writing in the nineteenth century posed several challenges for women and they
had to overcome several odds in order to express themselves. It was not easy and women
had the daunting task of defying the norms, yardsticks, and marginality to which they had
been subjected to in society. But excluded from social, political, and economic activities,
writing remained perhaps the only way through which they could assert their
individuality. Writing provided them with an opportunity to carry out a literary rebellion
against the deliberate marginality which they faced both as women and as writers. Be it
Jane Austen or the Bronte Sisters, the awareness and criticism of the defects prevalent in
the social system pertaining to the women of the age were quite visible in all of their
works.
In her novels, Jane Austen presented the late eighteenth and early nineteenth
century England and spoke with such clarity and truth of the relevant issues of her age
concerning women that the universal appeal of those issues make them and the novels
important even today. So, too, the novels of Charlotte, Emily, and Anne Bronte were
regarded among the greatest and most varied in nineteenth century literature. The Bronte
Sisters stand unparalleled in English fiction for no three sisters have distinguished
themselves so prominently as world-class writers. In creating the heroines that they did,
Austen and Brontes presented both the social, intellectual, and passionate aspects of
womanhood. But at the same time they allowed their heroines control over the passionate
side of her with an aim at their independence.
Austen novels were about the importance and making ofa good marriage from the
nineteenth century woman's point ofview. Her novels were centred on the theme of love
and marriage and how the wrong reasons and compulsions to marry could affect a
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woman's life for ever. No doubt, her novels were the novels of social manners; but
beneath the surface she was in fact talking about her own time, about problems facing
women then. One may think as to how marriage could be an ultimate issue for a modern
woman, for a feminist; but during Austen's time marriage was the only choice a woman
had. There she could have no say unless, of course, she had an inheritance and family to
fall back upon and could be independent and secure even without marriage like Emma
Woodhouse. But even in such a case, she faced the danger of being labeled as an old maid
and be pitied upon for her loneliness. In her novels Austen makes a comic presentation of
the integral relation between money, love, and marriage and their relevance to the social
scenario of the age, and how everything in turn would go on to affect a woman's life. But
underneath the comedy she had certain very honest and specific observations to make, not
only about the social scenario pertaining to women but also about human nature and
relationships as such. Jane Austen was in fact a forerunner of feminism, but hers was not
an overt feminism. She does not force her ideas or preach like many other writers of
today, but despite this her influence remains profound. In all her novels, she again and
again presents her heroines as strong and thinking individuals, making their own
decisions, even though those decisions were within the bounds of the conventions of the
time. Austen's writings were not exactly aimed towards a revolutionary social change, yet
they showed a marked shift from the conservative social ideology of the day in context
with the heroines and their relationships. In allowing them integrity, independence, a right
to their own decisions, and the will to stick by what they believed in, Austen showed a
marked departure from the social conservatism towards a limited social change.
During the Victorian period, women writers were judged against a social rather
than a literary yardstick. It was thought imperative for them to be modest, religious,
chaste, and sensitive in their writings just as they themselves were supposed to be. But
many Victorian women-writers such as the Bronte Sisters took exception to the rule and
resisted the imposition of non-literary restrictions upon their work. They were toughminded,
candid, and forthright in their writings.
The Bronte texts were feminist to the very core, if one analyses them keeping in
mind their social and historical context. The fact that these highly passionate, bold,
irreverent, often angry, sometimes normal yet most of thetime unpredictable novels, were
penned by three unmarried sisters, created quite a furore in the literary circles. The very
contradiction posed by the aggressiveness in their writings and their very own retiring
lives called for much shock, speculation, and interest towards them and their works. Their
works, aimed at reflecting and reshaping the nineteenth century 'cultural positioning' and
anxieties related to women, their role in society, their aspiration and fears, and their
craving for identity and independence, were revolutionary for the age. The Bronte women
stood for and asserted notions of female individuality and self-respect, and underwent a
relentless struggle aimed at achieving emotional satisfaction.
The Bronte Sisters were no doubt great creative writers. And though many may
say that their novels projected an unattractive vision of the world, then they were
interested in and spoke of the longings and passions, cravings and desires of the female
heart, and in doing so they presented a true but bleak scenario concerning the position of
women in the nineteenth century England.
The revolutionary mid-century Bronte genre did not in any way identify with
either the outlook or the subject matter of Austen novels. They were critical of Austen's
writings, especially Charlotte who found the atmosphere in her novels as stifling. But
despite the obvious coolness and attitude with which the later English novelists looked at
and spoke of Jane Austen, one cannot take away the fact that they owed much to Austen
as their predecessor. For though the times and issues did vary from the time of Austen to
the Brontes and so also the outlook with which these writers dealt with such issues, what
remained unchanged was the fact that they were women related issues and problems. And
these problems were addressed both by the Austen and the Brontes in their novels, only
difference being the attitude, manner, and intensity with which they treated the issues.
Vision may have been different for either but not the commitment towards feminism. |
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