Jane Eyre | Style
Narrative
Jane Eyre is written in the first person, and told from the viewpoint of its main character, Jane Eyre. As part of her first-person narrative, Bronte uses one of the oldest conventions in English fiction: this novel is allegedly a memoir written by a real woman named Jane Eyre and edited by Currer Bell (Charlotte Bronte's pseudonym). (Indeed, the full title of the book is Jane Eyre: An Autobiography. As part of this convention, the narrator occasionally addresses the reader directly with the word "reader.") Modern readers know, of...
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- Jane Eyre: Introduction
- Jane Eyre: Summary
- Jane Eyre: Overview
- Jane Eyre: Charlotte Brontë Biography
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Jane Eyre: Summary and Analysis
- Chapters 1-3 Summary and Analysis
- Chapters 4-6 Summary and Analysis
- Chapters 7-10 Summary and Analysis
- Chapters 11-15 Summary and Analysis
- Chapters 16-19 Summary and Analysis
- Chapters 20-22 Summary and Analysis
- Chapters 23-25 Summary and Analysis
- Chapters 26-27 Summary and Analysis
- Chapters 28-29 Summary and Analysis
- Chapters 30-31 Summary and Analysis
- Chapter 32-33 Summary and Analysis
- Chapter 34-35 Summary and Analysis
- Chapters 36-38 Summary and Analysis
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Jane Eyre: Quizzes
- Chapters 1-3 Questions and Answers
- Chapters 4-6 Questions and Answers
- Chapters 7-10 Questions and Answers
- Chapters 11-15 Questions and Answers
- Chapters 16-19 Questions and Answers
- Chapters 20-22 Questions and Answers
- Chapters 23-25 Questions and Answers
- Chapters 26-27 Questions and Answers
- Chapters 28-29 Questions and Answers
- Chapters 30-31 Questions and Answers
- Chapter 32-33 Questions and Answers
- Chapter 34-35 Questions and Answers
- Chapters 36-38 Questions and Answers
- Jane Eyre: Characters
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- Jane Eyre: Style
- Jane Eyre: Historical Context
- Jane Eyre: Critical Overview
- Jane Eyre: Essays and Criticism
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