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Literature: High School: 9th and 10th Grade Quiz - Jane Eyre - Context (Questions)

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This high school English Literature quiz focuses on context in Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre. When used to refer to a work of literature, “context” means the specific environment in which a text was written. Context includes an author’s social and political environment in addition to the time and geographical location in which he or she wrote. This particular collection of influences might sound familiar to you because these same elements within the text are discussed as “setting”. Setting refers, of course, to these aspects of a text’s created, fictional world, while context refers to these aspects of the author’s own world. The meaning of a text is never dictated by its context. Authors are, however, influenced by their environment and this influence can be seen in the texts which they write. Personal beliefs also have an effect on the text, although it is important not to make easy assumptions about their influence.

How to write about context

Try to learn as much as you can about the context of any fictional work you study. Doing so will enable you to better understand the important influences which helped to shape the text. It is important not to leap to the conclusion that context dictates the meaning of a text, however. The influence of context on meaning can often be subtle and it is unwise to assume that a particular historical event is represented in an unbiased and clear way in the pages of a fictional text. Nevertheless, having some knowledge of context gives you a good grounding for approaching an analysis of a text.

Reading a novel such as Jane Eyre, which is far removed from the modern day, is always in interesting experience. It is easy to identify with the young Jane and her determination despite the many differences between Charlotte Brontë’s time and our own. One of the traps into which some readers fall is to see the novel as a form of autobiography and to look for all of the correspondences between Brontë’s life and Jane's. Jane, of course, is a fictional creation, like any other character.

Research the context of Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre, remembering everything you have learned in English (and maybe history) lessons, and try these questions to see how much you know about the context of the novel.

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1. When was Jane Eyre first published?
[ ] 1797
[ ] 1847
[ ] 1897
[ ] 1947
2. Jane Eyre was first published under which name?
[ ] George Eliot
[ ] "A Lady"
[ ] Currer Bell
[ ] Charlotte Brontë
3. Where did Charlotte Brontë live during the time when she wrote Jane Eyre?
[ ] Yorkshire
[ ] Belgium
[ ] Paris
[ ] London
4. Charlotte Brontë spent some time working as which of the following?
[ ] Journalist
[ ] Headmistress
[ ] Painter
[ ] Teacher
5. Where was Charlotte sent with her sisters after her mother died?
[ ] To a workhouse
[ ] To be cared for by her unkind aunt in the north of England
[ ] The Clergy Daughters' School
[ ] To a convent
6. What does Spanish-town, Jamaica, have in common with India, where St John Rivers carries out his missionary work?
[ ] Charlotte Brontë traveled widely, including to both of these places
[ ] Charlotte Brontë had uncles living in both places
[ ] Both places were part of the British Empire
[ ] The two places have nothing in common
7. In which era was Jane Eyre written?
[ ] The Elizabethan
[ ] The Georgian
[ ] The Regency
[ ] The Victorian
8. What was the profession of Charlotte Brontë's father?
[ ] Doctor
[ ] Teacher
[ ] Solicitor
[ ] Clergyman
9. Inheritance plays an important role in Jane Eyre. Which of the following events relies on the rules of inheritance?
[ ] The Rivers family do not inherit money which they had expected
[ ] Rochester has not long owned Thornfield Hall
[ ] Jane becomes an "independent" woman
[ ] All of the above
10. How are the Yorkshire Moors depicted in the novel?
[ ] As a gentle, nurturing environment
[ ] As a harsh environment, both in physical and social terms
[ ] As a civilized, cultivated environment
[ ] As a gentle environment inhabited by harsh people
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Literature: High School: 9th and 10th Grade Quiz - Jane Eyre - Context (Answers)
1. When was Jane Eyre first published?
[ ] 1797
[x] 1847
[ ] 1897
[ ] 1947
Jane Eyre was first published in October 1847
2. Jane Eyre was first published under which name?
[ ] George Eliot
[ ] "A Lady"
[x] Currer Bell
[ ] Charlotte Brontë
Charlotte Brontë, like some other female authors of her era, published under a male pseudonym. Her sister Emily published Wuthering Heights under the name Ellis Bell; their sister Anne used the name Acton Bell
3. Where did Charlotte Brontë live during the time when she wrote Jane Eyre?
[x] Yorkshire
[ ] Belgium
[ ] Paris
[ ] London
The Brontë home was in Haworth, Yorkshire
4. Charlotte Brontë spent some time working as which of the following?
[ ] Journalist
[ ] Headmistress
[ ] Painter
[x] Teacher
Charlotte Brontë taught English at a school in Brussels for a short while
5. Where was Charlotte sent with her sisters after her mother died?
[ ] To a workhouse
[ ] To be cared for by her unkind aunt in the north of England
[x] The Clergy Daughters' School
[ ] To a convent
Jane's time at Lowood School was inspired by this early educational experience. Two of Charlotte Brontë's sisters died after becoming seriously ill at the school
6. What does Spanish-town, Jamaica, have in common with India, where St John Rivers carries out his missionary work?
[ ] Charlotte Brontë traveled widely, including to both of these places
[ ] Charlotte Brontë had uncles living in both places
[x] Both places were part of the British Empire
[ ] The two places have nothing in common
The men of Jane Eyre travel to the outposts of the British Empire: Rochester marries in Jamaica and St John aims to produce new Christians through conversion in India
7. In which era was Jane Eyre written?
[ ] The Elizabethan
[ ] The Georgian
[ ] The Regency
[x] The Victorian
Queen Victoria ruled Britain through most of the nineteenth century
8. What was the profession of Charlotte Brontë's father?
[ ] Doctor
[ ] Teacher
[ ] Solicitor
[x] Clergyman
Her father shares this profession with St John Rivers, who is also responsible for parish life on the Yorkshire moors. St John admits to the ambitions and difficulties underlying his choice of profession
9. Inheritance plays an important role in Jane Eyre. Which of the following events relies on the rules of inheritance?
[ ] The Rivers family do not inherit money which they had expected
[ ] Rochester has not long owned Thornfield Hall
[ ] Jane becomes an "independent" woman
[x] All of the above
As a younger son, Rochester had not expected to inherit Thornfield. When Jane's uncle learns of her existence, he leaves her his fortune, thereby disappointing the Rivers family who might have inherited some of his money. Jane, of course, rectifies the situation by sharing her inheritance with her new-found cousins
10. How are the Yorkshire Moors depicted in the novel?
[ ] As a gentle, nurturing environment
[x] As a harsh environment, both in physical and social terms
[ ] As a civilized, cultivated environment
[ ] As a gentle environment inhabited by harsh people
Jane is repeatedly turned away when driven to ask for help and nearly dies from exposure, yet the Moors are also where she finds unexpected hope by stumbling across the home of the Rivers siblings