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Deconstructing the Victorian Governess

Deconstructing the Victorian Governess. Historicizing Meaning in Jane Eyre. The Governess Narrative. Bronte’s novel is one of many books that chronicle the life and times of the Victorian governess.

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Deconstructing the Victorian Governess

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  1. Deconstructing the Victorian Governess Historicizing Meaning in Jane Eyre

  2. The Governess Narrative • Bronte’s novel is one of many books that chronicle the life and times of the Victorian governess. • Notable other examples include Thackery’sVanity Fair, Anne Bronte’s Agnes Grey, and later, James’s Turn of the Screw • MANY others were classified as popular fiction and are not widely read today.

  3. The Governess Narrative • Why so many governess narratives?!? (we have to go “outside the text” to answer this question) • Belsey’s model of language in practice asks us to think about how the literary text is constructed out of and participates in a series of historically situated systems of difference and meaning. • Understanding the problem of the governess is a way of laying out the complicated terrain of social meaning that Jane Eyre operated in.

  4. The Problems with Governesses • In her day, the governess figure was a source of intense scrutiny, anxiety and social criticism. • These criticisms stemmed from the problems that she created in the strict values and social categories of the era. • The governess is a problem for the intersections of… • Gender ideology • Class ideology • Proper sexuality • These problems led to a variety of ambivalent representations where the governess is both a sympathetic figure AND a threat to the virtuous operation of the Victorian home.

  5. Problem for Gender Norms • The gender politics of the late 18th Century and 19th Century was dominated by the values ascribed to gender by the idea of “separate spheres” • Unmarried women – “spinsters” – were universally derided as drains upon their family (who were their only means of support) and for failing to fulfill their “natural” social role.

  6. Problem for Gender Norms • By around the mid-19th Century, commentators of the period begin to notice a “surplus” of “redundant” women especially in the upper and middle classes • One of the reasons for the “surplus” of available, respectable women was the colonial project – so many young men were abroad. • It has been suggested that this was one of the reasons for the rise and increasing visibility of the profession in this era – as well as its increasing social acceptance. • As one of the few positions that a socially respectable woman could inhabit outside of marriage and family, the 19th Century saw an increase in governess positions.

  7. Problem for Gender Norms • Early associations with the “spinster” created stereotypes of the governess as old, dry, and ugly – a stereotype which quickly ran into conflict with the reality of the young, and still marriageable women who actually occupied the position • In addition, governesses were most often employed to instruct young upper-class girls (boys went to boarding schools) and to model correct norms of femininity. • Contradiction: how can a woman who is already disqualified from proper (married) femininity exemplify the values of that same femininity for young girls?

  8. Problems for Gender/Class • The governess was essentially an employed middle-upper class woman – an unusual circumstance • Upper class in manner, but often associated with lower-classes in actual social standing • This created a certain crisis in the meaning of class: the governess was expected to resemble the upper-class in all ways but simultaneously to never mistake herself for her social betters

  9. Problems for Gender/Class • Class has a gendered dimension: a middle-upper class woman who is unmarried and who, unlike the spinster, has not given up on the possibility of her own happiness, must (of course) be desperately seeking a husband • This led many to see the governess as a sly, malicious, and thoroughly inappropriate social climber out to seduce upper-class men she might encounter in her job

  10. Problems for Gender/Class • In addition, the governess position gave single women an unprecedented amount of financial independence and autonomy • Stories began to appear about governesses who used their salaries to, on their days off, dress and act like upper-class women in public • These stories were used as evidence that the governess position caused these women to become disrespectful of their proper place in society – in terms of both gender and class status

  11. Problems for Gender/Class/Sexuality • In the dominant upper-class imagination, the financial independence and working status of the lower-class woman was inextricably tied to stereotypes about her sexual aggression • Through this association, the governess was associated with the prostitute • This association led to criticisms that the governess was the equivalent of a prostitute that one had invited to live in your home

  12. Problems for Gender/Class/Sexuality • In the home, governesses were actually placed in a very vulnerable position • They were respectable women, who nevertheless were exempt from the strict rules of proper courtship and etiquette • They could be approached simply and directly with little or no social ramifications • The governess on the other hand was bound by the rules of etiquette that were given in her role as servant and dependent – a deeply unequal situation

  13. Problems for Gender/Class/Sexuality • In these ways, the governess embodied the fear of unregulated sexuality in the home • At the same time that the governess was becoming a stock figure in the novel, a whole genre of governess pornography was also being circulated • These materials often depicted the governess as the seductress who has an inappropriate amount of authority in the household

  14. Back to Social Meaning… • These examples show how the figure of the governess was plurally constructed by a dense network of social meanings and subject positions. • Older categories and stock narratives are used to explain her/describe her: • The “upper-class lady” • The “spinster” • The “social climber” • The “prostitute” • Contradictions are produced at the intersection of these categories which cause a significant amount of social anxiety • This is the terrain of social meaning in which Jane Eyre participates.

  15. Richard Redgrave, The Governess (1844)

  16. Rebecca Solomon, The Governess (1854)

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