Jane Eyre is written from the first person standpoint. How does this affect our judgement of the protagonist Jane?

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Jane Eyre is written from the first person standpoint.  How does this affect our judgement of the protagonist Jane?

Jane Eyre is narrated by its title character and so presents us with a story from a sole point of view.  When the novel was first published it included the subtitle, ‘An Autobiography,’ thereby drawing further attention to its narration by one person very much involved with the story to be told.  The nature of the narrator and their relationship with the reader has a great effect on how we judge their character, and Jane Eyre is no exception.  Jane Eyre provides us with a narration of events and dialogue, as well as an account of her thoughts and feelings.

The novel can be classified as a bildungsroman, as it charts the growth of Jane from a child into a young woman.  This particular genre of the novel capitalises on the first person narrator and as a result creates a story that is extremely sympathetic to the plight of the protagonist.  As a child at the very beginning of the novel, Jane utters to herself the words ‘Unjust! – unjust!’ (p17) and it is impossible for the reader not to constantly recall these words as Jane suffers at the hands of her cousins and later at Lowood School.  By reading an account from a first person narrator we are privy to not just a narration of events, but also of internalised emotions.  In this respect, it is often easy for this type of narration to become biased and extremely subjective.  We are able to understand how Jane feels, but must rely on her perception when it comes to the feelings of others.

It is true that Jane’s narration is a very personal account and as a result is often selective, with Jane recounting experiences that stick in her memory, ‘I remember well the distracting irritation I endured from the cause every evening’ (p62).  However, because of the way Bronte characterises Jane – of good moral nature and of constant character – we accept her as a credible narrator.  Our sympathy and bias towards her cause is aided by the fact that we are given an insight into Jane’s life right from her childhood.  This means that we can relate to her and sympathise with her situation, knowing where she has come from and what drives her.

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There is no illusion presented in the novel that we are reading an unbiased version of events.  In fact, the narrator of Jane Eyre makes the relationship between reader and herself very clear, frequently bringing attention to the our position as reader ‘True, reader, and I knew and felt this’ (p79).  The power of the narrator becomes very clear as the novel progresses, with Jane Eyre often speculating on her role as narrator, ‘A new chapter in a novel is something like a new scene in a play; and when I draw up the curtain this time, reader – you ...

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