Introduction
1. Literary Analysis: Jane Eyre
2. Education for Victorian Girls
 FROM:
 Mrs. Sarah Trimmer, The Economy of Charity; or,
 an Address to Ladies; Adapted to the Present State
 of Charitable Institutions in England (1801)
 Frances Power Cobbe, Life of Frances Power Cobbe,
 as Told by Herself (1904)
 Hannah Lynch, Autobiography of a Child (1899)
 Elizabeth Gaskell, The Life of Charlotte Bronte (1857)
 "An Enquiry into the State of Girls’ Fashionable
 Schools" (Fraser’s Magazine, 1845)
 Hannah More, Strictures on the Modern System of
 Female Education (1799)
 Thomas Gisborne, An Enquiry into the Duties of the
 Female Sex (1797)
 William Duff, Letters on the Intellectual and Moral
 Character of Women (1807)
3. The Governess in Nineteenth-Century England
 FROM:
 M. Mostyn Bird, Woman at Work: A Study of the Different
 Ways of Earning a Living Open to Women (1911)
 Mary Wollstonecraft, Thoughts on the Education of
 Daughters, with Reflections on Female Conduct in
 the More Important Duties of Life (1787)
 Advice to Governesses (1827)
 Sarah Lewis, "On the Social Position of Governesses"
 (Fraser’s Magazine, 1848)
 Anne Bronte, Agnes Grey (1847)
 Elizabeth Gaskell, The Life of Charlotte Bronte (1857)
4.  Madness and Victorian Women: Diagnosis and Treatment
 FROM:
 Henry Maudsley, Body and Mind (1873)
 Henry Maudsley, Responsibility in Mental Disease (1874)
 Alexander Morison, Outlines of Mental Diseases (1824)
 William Willis Moseley, Eleven Chapters on Nervous
 and Mental Complaints (1838)
 Andrew Wynter,
 George C. Brodrick, English Land and English
 Landlords (1881)
 Sir William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws
 of England (1765)
 William Alexander, The History of Women from the
 Earliest Antiquity, to the Present Time (1779)
 Sir Frederick Pollock and Frederic William Maitland,
 The History of English Law Before the Time of
 Edward I (1898)
6. Jane Eyre: Issues in the Twenty-first Century
Index