II INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE OF YOUNG RESEARCHERS
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Qafqaz University
18-19 April 2014, Baku, Azerbaijan
they differ from each other as well. These twocharacters join together todemonstrate not only the need for a deeper view of
female Victorian characters, but also how varied and complicated a positive and realistic category of female characters
needs to be.
Charlotte Brontë and Virginia Woolfhave demonstrated the female awareness and independence of their modern ages;
however, it appears that Victorian women still fail to be separated from domestic marriage. Though both Charlotte Brontë
and Virginia Woolf have described and declared their attitudes toward women awareness, they have donated them with
different characteristics and fortunes suggesting the conventional ideas in Victorian and modern age. In Brontë’s literary
works, however, female roles ultimately cannot avoid the relation of marriage, which is considered as the destination of
Victorian women. On the contrary, Woolf’s women characters would not always follow this pattern. Furthermore, she has
pointed out the fault of Brontë’s fiction.
Most of the heroines in Brontë’s novels are passionate, anxious, and often contradictory in their domestic world, so
they are often closed to matrimony at the end of the novels. Both Brontë’s Jane Eyre and Shirley ensure the argument of
convention that Virginia Woolf attacks.
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