Members of English ENGL 0600J Madmen, Mystics, Monsters, Prophets, and Perverts (2009)
- Freedom Mistaken for Insanity
- The Red-Room and Jane's Imprisonment
- An Uneasy Shift of Power
- Jane Eyre: Magic and Madness
- Jane Eyre's Conflicting Nature
- Passion, Isolation and Punctuation
- Unacceptable Prerogatives
- Morality and Authority in Jane Eyre
- Helen Burns' Engrained Inhumanity
- Problematic Proposals
- Veiled Vehemence
- A Mature, Subservient Jane
- Jane's Return to Gateshead
- Jane's Narration
- I Must Keep in Good Health, and Not Die
- The Curious Case of Helen Burns
- A Novel about Conformity
- Power
- The Inherent Faults of Passion
Members of English 156, Victorians and Moderns (2004)
- Law, Insanity and Self-Respect in Jane Eyre
- The supernatural element in Jane Eyre
- Confinement and Liberation
- Issues of Social Marginalization and Physical Isolation and their Moral Significances in Jane Eyre
- Imprisonment and Confinement
- Helen Burns and Death
- Helen Burns consoles Jane
- Theme and Perspective in Jane Eyre
- Richard Mason
- Helen Burn's Christianity and Jane's Development
- Mining for Martyrs in Jane Eyre
- Empty Stomachs = Salvation?
- Jane Eyre: The Body Controlled, the Body Freed
- Madness in Jane Eyre
- Questions by Philip V. Allingham, Lakehead University, Canada
Last modified 28 January 2009