Home > Wide Sargasso Sea Summary & Study Guide > Topics for Further Study
Wide Sargasso Sea | Topics for Further Study
Rhys based her character Antoinette Cosway on Bertha Mason, the madwoman in Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre. Compare the depictions of the two women.
In Wide Sargasso Sea the black servants set fire to Coulibri after they learn that Mr. Mason is planning on importing workers from the East Indies. How did the diverse working population—Indian, Chinese, African-Caribbean, white Creole, and European—interact in the nineteenth-century Caribbean?
Investigate the care of the mentally ill in the nineteenth century and compare their treatment to the way in which...
[The entire page is 126 words long]
Join eNotes
The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the:
Summary and Analysis – Themes – Characters – And much more...
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Wide Sargasso Sea: Introduction
- Wide Sargasso Sea: Summary
- Wide Sargasso Sea: Jean Rhys Biography
- Wide Sargasso Sea: Characters
- Wide Sargasso Sea: Themes
- Wide Sargasso Sea: Style
- Wide Sargasso Sea: Historical Context
- Wide Sargasso Sea: Critical Overview
- Wide Sargasso Sea: Essays and Criticism
- Wide Sargasso Sea: Topics for Further Study
- Wide Sargasso Sea: Media Adaptations
- Wide Sargasso Sea: What Do I Read Next?
- Wide Sargasso Sea: Bibliography and Further Reading
- Wide Sargasso Sea: Pictures
- Copyright
Tell a friend about Wide Sargasso Sea at eNotes.
