Unearthing The Dominant: Bertha Mason Vs Jane Eyre

Authors

  • R. Sindhu Assistant professor, Department of English VISTAS, Pallavaram, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India
  • P. Moby Samuel Assistant professor, department of English VISTAS , Pallavaram, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India

Abstract

Post colonialism is a major aspect in subaltern studies through which the silenced victims are given voice. The paper attempts to establish recognition for the doubly colonised subaltern. The instinct of a human, who claim to be in a power structure, demands natural indifference towards the subaltern in terms of their race, gender, social class and political inferiority. This dominance questions the fundamental, cultural, psychological and ethnic awareness of a society. The study elucidates the hegemony, ambivalence and ideologies of the suppresser and the suppressed subaltern with special limelight to Bertha Mason, in both texts namely Jane Eyre by Bronte and Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys. These texts disclose the personal augmentation in human that paves way to the social condemnation of the subaltern. Bertha Mason is silenced because of the imperial mindset in the nineteenth century England. This imperial dominance is one of the roots of subaltern studies. Metanarratives used in the Wide Sargasso Sea explain this appropriate hybridity, a new trans-cultural or cross cultural form that arises in terms of the oppressed.

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Published

10-02-2019

How to Cite

Sindhu, R., & Samuel, P. M. (2019). Unearthing The Dominant: Bertha Mason Vs Jane Eyre. SMART MOVES JOURNAL IJELLH, 7(2), 9. Retrieved from https://ijellh.com/index.php/OJS/article/view/6914