Written by students who passed Immediately available after payment Read online or as PDF Wrong document? Swap it for free 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Lecture notes

Notes exploring the depiction of imperialism and race in Victorian women's fiction

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
3
Uploaded on
09-01-2026
Written in
2010/2011

Covers the following: - race relations and relations between men and women - domestic and imperial spaces - shared frustrations of race and feminism - gender and race hierarchies - Jane Eyre - Comparisons of Shirley and Villette to people of non-white races - Class, race and gender oppression

Show more Read less

Content preview

Susan Meyer, Imperialism at Home: Race and Victorian Women’s Fiction (Cornell University
Press, 1996)

 Race relations used as a metaphor to explore relationships between men and women
in England.
Race as a Metaphor:
 Linking of white women with people of non-white races.
 A woman’s moral degeneracy was // racial degeneracy.
 Domestic space of England // imperial spaces.
 For Bronte- metaphor is used to illustrate ‘not shared inferiority but a shared
experience of frustration, limitation, and subordination’ (p.7.).
 Meyer takes issue with Perera, Azim, Said- their claims are too broad.
o They have ‘obscured the fact that the social positioning of various writers of
the domestic novel in nineteenth-century Britain put them in different relations
to the project of empire’ (p.9.)
 P.11- ‘since the gender positioning of British women writers required them to
negotiate an association with “inferior races”, their feminist impulses to question
gender hierarchies often provoked an interrogation of race hierarchies’.
 White women ‘occupied an ambiguous position on the racial scales of nineteenth-
century science’ (p.19.)
 The novel draws the comparisons itself- e.g. Jane describing herself as a “rebel
slave” or a “revolted slave”
 ‘a suppressed consciousness of the recent history of British slaveholding lies behind
the novel’s more tactful references to the Romans as slaveholders’ (p.21.)
 Sometimes characters are paired i.e. ‘one the white female protagonist and the other
a male or female character associated with one or more nonwhite races’ (p.21.)
 When they are using the metaphor, they are emptying the vehicle of its meaning. By
drawing a comparison, we are just looking at the similarities between e.g. the white
m/c woman and the black slave woman, without taking into account the other
qualities that both possess. Just remain on the margins of our consciousness.
 Novels looked at- ‘engage with or repress the history of British imperialism to various
degrees, but once the door has been opened through metaphor, that history finds its
way into these fictions’ (p.23.)
o E.g. in JE- housekeeper talks of Rochesters- youngest was a slaveholder in
Jamaica- have been a violent race.
 In Bronte’s writing- ‘race is both a major preoccupation and a central metaphor’
(p.25.)
 Earlier writings- celebrate imperial conquests with little ambivalence BUT Bronte’s
later stories- ‘grow more and more preoccupied with rebellion both against the racial
hierarchies of empire and against the constraints of female social roles’ (p.25.)
 JE- ‘echoes the language of accounts of slave uprisings’ (p.25.).

Ch2- “Indian Ink”- Colonialism and the Figurative Strategy of Jane Eyre.
 Heroines of Shirley and Villette- ‘both compared to people of nonwhite races
experiencing the force of European imperialism’ (p.60.)
 Louis Moore and M. Paul- both threaten to leave for colonies. ALSO ‘the man’s
dominating relationship with a colonial people is represented as a substitute for his
relationship with the rebellious heroine’ (p.60.)
 The Professor- letter’s recipient has left for the colonies. Crimsworth compares
Belgian school girls to West Indians/ slaves. Presented as savage etc. Also- Frances
Henri- ‘shows a potential rebelliousness against male domination that the novel
figures using the imagery of race’ (p.61.) Look at page 255 TP.
 The ‘figurative use of race relations in Bronte’s major fiction reveals a conflict
between sympathy for the oppressed and a hostile sense of racial supremacy’ (p.63.)

Jane Eyre:
 Jane compared to a slave at Gateshead and Lowood- look up.
 Metaphor of slavery- takes central status- imports character from the colonies.

Written for

Study
Unknown

Document information

Uploaded on
January 9, 2026
Number of pages
3
Written in
2010/2011
Type
Lecture notes
Professor(s)
Catherine butler
Contains
Depiction of imperialism and race in victorian women\\\'s fiction
£3.99
Get access to the full document:

Wrong document? Swap it for free Within 14 days of purchase and before downloading, you can choose a different document. You can simply spend the amount again.
Written by students who passed
Immediately available after payment
Read online or as PDF

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
SophieStudent

Also available in package deal

Thumbnail
Package deal
Charlotte Bronte Essay and Supporting notes - Shirley, The Professor, Jane Eyre
-
7 2026
£ 20.99 More info

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
SophieStudent (self)
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
1
Member since
6 months
Number of followers
0
Documents
40
Last sold
2 months ago

0.0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their exams and reviewed by others who've used these revision notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No problem! You can straightaway pick a different document that better suits what you're after.

Pay as you like, start learning straight away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and smashed it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Working on your references?

Create accurate citations in APA, MLA and Harvard with our free citation generator.

Working on your references?

Frequently asked questions