ENGL 628 Jane Eyre Neo-Victorian Appropriations Dashboard

Description

Jane Eyre: An Autobiography (1847) is a seminal text in the Western feminist literature canon, published fifty-five years after Mary Wollstonecraft’s A Vindication of the Rights of Woman and a year before the Seneca Falls convention launched the feminist movement in Western culture. Scores of authors, directors, and digital producers have attempted not just to adapt but to appropriate, revise, and modernize Charlotte Bronte’s most famous novel. Antonija Primorac contends that the current vogue of neo-Victorianism is “a powerful trend in contemporary Anglophone media” pointing to the “continuous production of adaptations and appropriations of Victorian literature and culture.” In order to be considered neo-Victorian, Ann Heilmann and Mark Llewellyn posit that “texts (literary, filmic, audio / visual) must in some respect be self-consciously engaged with the act of (re)interpretation, (re)discovery and (re)vision concerning the Victorians” (emphasis in original). In this class, we will explore the creative and rhetorical choices twentieth- and twenty-first-century authors have made when appropriating, revising, and modernizing Jane Eyre’s narrative, paying particular attention to gender ideology in the Victorian era and in more recent times. In this course, we will also leverage the new media capabilities of the COVE (Central Online Victorian Educator) web site in order to examine more deeply the impact of multimodal writing and digital technology on literary studies in the twenty-first century.

Galleries, Timelines, and Maps

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Posted by KENNETH LAREMORE on Thursday, November 7, 2019 - 18:40

Kimchi is a traditional Korean dish consisting of pickled vegetables, which is mainly served as a side dish with every meal, but also can be served as a main dish .In the past, people used to dig a hole in the ground to bury the crock to preserve the kimchi. Though there was no refrigerator, it remained tasty for the next year. Kimchi refrigerators, which are manufactured only in Korea, aim at mimicking the conditions of a clay container buried in the ground. The core difference between a kimchi refrigerator and other refrigerators is that the former directly cools the storage room. Kimchi refrigerators' adoption of direct cooling mimics the cold earth around the pottery that also cools it directly. It maintains a constant temperature and humidity. 

https://www.koreatimes.co.kr › www › news › tech › 2013/01

 

Blog entry
Posted by KENNETH LAREMORE on Thursday, November 7, 2019 - 18:14

Single mothers in Korean society suffer cultural stigmatism that is matter-of-factly inflicted upon orphans in Korean society as well. Approximately 200,000 Korean children have been adopted out of Korea since the 1950’s, with the majority having been abandoned. Korean society exacts a multitude of social and cultural pressures on single mothers and their children within a number of  unwritten norms and prejudices that are causing Korean women to abandon their children. If Jane Re was born in Korea from the same mother and father, she would not be considered a Korean citizen. In Korea, children of Korean citizen women, who had either a non-Korean father or no known Korean father were not Korean citizens, even if born in Korea. However, children whose “right of blood” could not be determined (orphaned, abandoned, or stateless), but are found within Korean sovereign territory are considered Korean citizens under South Korea’s citizenship laws. Mothers often...

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Posted by KENNETH LAREMORE on Monday, November 4, 2019 - 17:53

This Korean term is used throughout Re Jane is most commonly defined as the ability of a person to gauge other people's moods. It is considered important in interpersonal relationships. More specifically. it is the art of sensing what people are thinking and feeling. The emphasis of n unchi is usually placed on the collective rather than specific inbdividuals. In other words, nunchi is an asset at business meetings. IKn this article, the author states that in Korean child rearing, it's on a par with "Look both ways before crossing the street". Literally translated from Korean it means "eye-measure". In Korea, nunchi is woven into everyday life. Take, for example, business cards. Even in the era of LinkedIn, Koreans still exchange business cards, and the exchange approaches ceremonial levels: You must take and receive a business card with both hands, as if it were fragile, and study it respectfully for a few seconds. You never stuff it in your wallet. This ritual gives all...

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Posted by Brittany Atkinson on Thursday, October 31, 2019 - 21:45

The first traumatic event of Wide Sargasso Sea occurs only two pages into the story. Antoinette's mother's horse is killed, left dead under the frangipani tree: "...he was dead and his eyes were black with flies. I ran away and did not speak of it for I thought if I told no one it might not be true" (Rhys 16). The frangipani tree, although beautiful when in full bloom, has a contrasting wintertime nickname: "the ugly duckling." When winter approaches, the beautiful tree turns into an ugly skeleton of branches (Delvalle). This transformation parallels the storyline of Jane Eyre, or in in this case the prequel to Jane Eyre. Rhys opens with the horse death under the frangipani tree to foreshadow a transformation from something beautiful to something ugly, just as Antoinette and Bertha spiral into insanity.

Bibliography: Delvalle, Terry Brite. “Garden Help: Plumeria go from ugly duckling to swan plant.” The Florida Times-Union, 20 May 2017,...

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Posted by Brittany Atkinson on Thursday, October 31, 2019 - 21:27

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is referenced about halfway through the novel. According to Gemma, "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde was one of my uncle's favourite books...He thought everyone had to struggle between the good and bad parts of himself" (Livesey 225). Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde was published in 1886 by Robert Louis Stevenson. According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica, "The names of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, the two alter egos of the main character, have become shorthand for the exhibition of wildly contradictory behavior, especially between private and public selves" (Lebeau). As with Jane Eyre, The Flight of Gemma Hardy utilizes allusion in order to construct parallels. Here, Gemma Hardy makes a parallel between the alter ego she'll soon discover of Mr. Sinclair by referencing it as one of her uncle's favorite books. As the novel progresses, it even reveals the own alter egos present within herself. 

Bibliography: Lebeau, Vicky. “The Strange...

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Posted by Brittany Atkinson on Thursday, October 31, 2019 - 21:12

When Miriam is on her death bed at the hospital, she asks Gemma to tell her a selkie story (Livesey 111). Gemma starts the story, positioning it as a woman living in the village by the sea. According to the OED, the selkie story is "also, in folklore, a creature or spirit having the appearance of a seal; spec. one able to assume human form” (“sealkie”). Elisabeth Gifford is a prose writer who also reflects on and has an interest in the selkie story. She writes, "The legend of the Selkie is told along the Western coast of Scotland and as far down as Ireland. Selkies are seals in the water, but once on land, they take off their skins and become human. If an ordinary mortal sees a Selkie in human form, they will inevitably fall in love. The Selkie legend has several variations but never ends happily. The husband or wife of a Selkie may hide away their seal skins, but once their hiding place is discovered the Selkie is powerless to resist the call of the sea. He slides back...

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Posted by Brittany Atkinson on Thursday, October 31, 2019 - 21:07

The Autobiography of Jane Eyre uses Tumblr as a source to not only communicate, but also bring awareness to its transmedia elements. For example, in episode nine titled "Q & A," Jane makes watchers realize that the questions being answered are from Tumblr (or at least pretends they were from Tumblr and not fabricated). This not only reinforces the transmedia element of the web series, but also makes watchers form connections to the original novel. In the novel, written letters are often used to communicate, due to the time period.

It is also notable that Jane Eyre does not allow readers to be directly addressed until the very end, when Jane acknowledges the readers, directly telling readers that she married Mr. Rochester. This change from the original novel to the web series brings awareness to the ways in which the world today is much more connected, due to cellphones, the internet, emails, and so on, than it was when Jane Eyre was written....

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Posted by Brittany Atkinson on Thursday, October 31, 2019 - 20:53

In The Flight of Gemma Hardy, Gemma discusses why “G” is her favorite letter, and ends up revealing a snippet about her name: "Because it's the first letter of the name of a little clam called a Gemma gemma. And it's a letter in your surname. And it's the first letter of garage" (Livesey 324). In many works of literature, the process of naming characters is a way to add depth to a story. Gemma sounds a lot like "gem" or "gemstone.” In fact, according to Behind the Name, it is a, “Medieval Italian nickname meaning "gem, precious stone." It was borne by the wife of the 13th-century Italian poet Dante Alighieri” (Gemma). In addition to this, Gemma’s name could also allude to, as Gemma Hardy states, a little clam. If one looks at an image of a “gemma gemma” via Google, they would see it is a very small clam (Gemma's size is noted as being small throughout the entirety of the novel). This physical parallel is the obvious way the two are...

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Posted by Brittany Atkinson on Thursday, October 31, 2019 - 20:40

Throughout reading different hypertexts, it becomes clear that each author chooses to reinvent the characters, plot points, and motifs present in Jane Eyre in unique ways. One aspect that changes through different versions of Jane Eyre is the name of the child Jane looks after. Identity is so closely intertwined with the process of naming, making the author’s decision on a name important, as it can add layers to the reading of a novel. In Jane, Lindner decides to name the child Madeline (Maddy) rather than Adèle (as is the case in Jane Eyre). The daughter is the offspring of Nico and Celine, a rock star and a French popstar (Lindner 14). The choice to keep the “del” in Madeline nods to Adèle, while being an Anglicized spelling of it (versus Madeleine, which would be the French spelling). Using a French name in an English spelling is an interesting nod to the unity between a French popstar and an English rock star having a baby...

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Posted by KENNETH LAREMORE on Sunday, October 20, 2019 - 19:18

In Chapter 19 of Jane,  the reader experiences another cultural thrust of modernization when Nico’s comeback makes news in Entertainment Weekly with the headline “Rathburn’s Back and Better than Ever”. This magazine covers film, television, music, Broadway, books, and popular culture in general. The magazine features celebrities on the cover and addresses topics such as ratings, movie grosses, production costs, concert ticket sales, ad budgets, and in-depth articles about scheduling, producers, etc. Its sister magazine is People. The last issue of each year features a cover showing the “Entertainer of the Year” chosen by readers on the EW website. Past winners have run the gamut from Bart Simpson to Ben Affleck.

https://ew.com/

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Individual Entries

Chronology Entry
Posted by madison rahner on Thursday, November 14, 2019 - 09:00
Blog entry
Posted by Parag Desai on Thursday, November 14, 2019 - 08:51

The Physical Return

Helene K. Lee in “The Logics of Cosmopolitan Koreanness and Global Citizenship” (2018) describes the dispositions and disparities of Korean Americans (and Korean Chinese) in relation to homeland South Koreans. Lee details the way that cosmopolitanism is utilized as an effective apparatus for navigating identity, ideology, and consolidating cultural capital as travelling migrants or those born into Western societies and then make the return home. Although modern day South Korea, especially in the bigger cities like Seoul or Busan, aren’t considered third-word or in association with the Global South, the specific characteristics that make a person ‘Korean’ or adjust to the Korean way of life is set at a different standard than those of Chinese or American origins. Lee says that hyphenated persons in Korea use their differences as “mobility” (115).

            Such is the issue of a developing dissonance for older generations of...

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Place
Posted by Kayla Jessop on Wednesday, November 13, 2019 - 21:31

In Patricia Park's Re Jane, an appropriation of Jane Eyre, Jane Re interviews and works for Ed Farley and Dr. Beth Mazer in Carroll Gardens in Brooklyn, New York. When Jane approaches the house, she explains that "646 Thorn Street was the only house on the block with a string of red paper lanterns hung in the doorway. To the left of the door was a hooded bay window, and from where I stood it gave the impression that the house was winking at me," (Park 21). Thorn Street is a nod to the hypo-text Jane Eyre's Thornfield Hall where Mr. Rochester lived. According to the website Street Easy, Carroll Gardens is a very high price, high society place to live (Sreet Easy). We get a sense of this in the novel as Jane is always commenting on the area's boujie atmosphere, noting both the people and the geographic location. Street Easy claims that Carroll Gardens is "one of Brooklyn's oldest Italian enclaves... a destination for families looking for a kid-...

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Place
Posted by Kayla Jessop on Wednesday, November 13, 2019 - 20:58

In Patricia Park's Re Jane, an appropriation of Jane Eyre, Jane Re is from Koreatown in Flushing, New York. Within the first chapter "Flushing", Jane says "Home was this northeastern knot of Queens, in the town (if you could call it a town of Flushing" (Park 1). She continues by explaining that the town that was once "contained by a hearty swath of the American population" turned into a Korean town with shops such as "Daedong River Fishmarket," "Chosun Dynasty Auto Body," and "Kumgang Mountain Dry Cleaning" (1). Within Jane's hometown of Flushing, her uncle and aunt, whom which she lived with, owned their own shop: "It was a modest-size grocery carrying a mix of American and Korean products, along with the usual emergency supples-batteries, candles and condoms (1-2). Jane works at the family store on and off throughout the novel as a cashier and whatever else her uncle needed. The only times Jane did not...

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Posted by KENNETH LAREMORE on Wednesday, November 13, 2019 - 14:08

Busan is South Korea’s second largest city, located on its southeastern coast. Its logo tag name is ‘Dynamic Busan, City of Tomorrow’. It is also the city where Jane Re’s mother lived as a young child. Many South Koreans feel that the appeal of Busan – indeed, a reason to prefer it over Seoul – comes not from what it offers as a city of tomorrow, but what it offers as a city of yesterday. Busan is a rare piece of territory not captured by the Northern army during the Korean War. Busan came through the 1950s intact, serving during wartime as the capital of the Republic of Korea. The city incurred far less involuntary demolition in that era, so has endured a less thoroughgoing redevelopment since. If you are seeking ‘old’ urban South Korea, you’ll find it here. Most of Busan developed during and just after the war, when the relative safety of Busan made it the prime destination for refugees who proceeded to make for the...

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Posted by KENNETH LAREMORE on Wednesday, November 13, 2019 - 11:15

In Chapter 18 of Re Jane, Changhoon gets tickets to the first game of the 2002 FIFA World Cup and takes Jane Re. The 2002 World Cup is remembered as one of the most contentious of all time. It should be remembered as the tournament of the underdog. Senegal beat holders France in the group stage before dumping out Sweden in the Round of 16; Turkey advanced to the semi-finals before losing by a single goal to Brazil; and host nation South Korea went on a run which included disputed knockout triumphs over Italy and Spain. The first contentious decision of the tournament would take place six years before it had even begun, when Japan and South Korea were selected as joint hosts in the summer of 1996. It was the first (and, to date, last) time that two nations would share hosting duties for the World Cup, with neither country having the infrastructure required to go it alone. The South Korean teammates were treated like heroes on the Korean peninsula, with even the chairman of...

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Posted by Brittany Atkinson on Tuesday, November 12, 2019 - 17:24

Patricia Park’s Re Jane is an adaptation of Jane Eyre that investigates the nuances of living as a hyphenated American, specifically a Korean American in New York. Jane constantly finds herself looking through the eyes of others, a process that often leads her to trying to meet both Eurocentric beauty and cultural standards while in New York, and Korean beauty and cultural standards while in South Korea. This act of seeing herself through the eyes of others extends into Ed, her love interest in this adaptation of the novel. At first, she adores the way he looks at her, noticing the fondness and love he has for her. However, she eventually finds his gaze to be controlling, as he attempts to make her adhere to standards he believes a white American should follow (that echo the standard Chandler in Korea tried to impose upon her as well): moving in, settling down, and getting married (Park 318). By the end, she is able to avert his gaze, expressing her agency in...

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Chronology Entry
Posted by Alyssa Isaac on Tuesday, November 12, 2019 - 13:12
Place
Posted by Alyssa Isaac on Tuesday, November 12, 2019 - 10:59

In general, New York City is composed of five boroughs that include Manhattan, Staten Island, Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx. Manhattan is a little over 13 miles long and 2 miles wide. This borough's avenues run north and south with streets running east and west. Thoroughfares that are one way are common here. Fifth Avenue has the island divided into east and west sides. This borough is mentioned in Lindner's Jane, when Jane travels to her sister's home in Manhattan (pgs.181-182, Lindner). This borough is also mentioned in when Jane Re in Patrcia Park's Re Jane says that "We were, after all, Bridge & Tunnel: all all our roads led to Manhattan. It was the borough that blazed in its own violet light and threw scrapes of shadows on the rest of us."(p.17, Park). These two different works intersect when it comes to setting as both characters travel through Manhattan. Jane Re in Park's work even acknowledges indirectly that all roads lead to Manhattan, making it the...

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Place
Posted by Alyssa Isaac on Tuesday, November 12, 2019 - 09:52

This city is the largest in South Korea, and it can best be described as a metropolis that mixes the ancient with modern. The capital features the cutting-edge landscape made up of glass, concrete and steel skyscrapers that tower over more traditional houses made of wood and tiled roof. Popular neighborhoods such as, Gangnam, Hongdae and Itaewon are a lure for visitors as it offers plenty of shopping, dining and entertainment possibilities. Jane in Park's Re Jane, lands in this city in order to attend her maternal grandfather's funeral, which also happened to be the day after the day after 9/11(pgs. 133-134). Based on the description of the city's architecture and its large population, it shares a close resemblance to New York, where Jane grew up. Jane will soon find that there are cultural differences in beauty and social expectations between her mother's home country in South Korea and the country she was raised in the United States.

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