This quotation suggests that the character of Bertha Mason itself was presented in a way and manner in which female discourse or the existence of women was seen as secondary at best or unimportant at worst This is because the definition and identification of Bertha Mason as a person itself was not based on anything but the view and opinion of Edward Rochester Edward Rochester defines and gives meaning to Jane Eyre and Bertha Mason by means of what he said to them Thus, the book reflects fundamental masculinity as a way and a system through which women are defined in the eyes of men in the era that the book is set
Received on Thu Dec 10 2020 - 22:04:24 CET