المساعد الشخصي الرقمي

مشاهدة النسخة كاملة : مساعده فى اختصارات ابيها ضرورى



ميرا فهد
18-05-2010, 11:39 PM
بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم
السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته
اخوانى اخواتى اعضاء هالمنتدى الاكثر من رائع عندى طلب واتمنى انكم تساعدونى فيه..... الدكتوره اعطتنا رواية Jane Eyre وطلبت منا انا نطلع الcharacters وال thems انا طلعتهم بس لقيتهم طويله ومش مختصره وصعبه واهيه تقول راح اختبركم فيها وانتو طلعو المعلومات يلى راح تذاكرونها ممكن تختصرون لى الشخصيات والثيم انا ابى اهم اربع شخصيات وابيها مختصره ومعلوماتها سهله وواضحه وابى الثيم لايزيد عن ثلاث اسطر وابى سبع او سته اسئله حلوه وسهله واجاباتها مختصره عن القصه الله يحرم وجيهكم عن النار ساعدونى تكفوووووون وتفضلووو هاذى الشخصيات يلى لقيتها
Jane Eyre



The protagonist and narrator of the novel, Jane is an intelligent, honest, plain-featured young girl forced to contend with oppression, inequality, and hardship. Although she meets with a series of individuals who threaten her autonomy, Jane repeatedly succeeds at asserting herself and maintains her principles of justice, human dignity, and morality. She also values intellectual and emotional fulfillment. Her strong belief in gender and social equality challenges the Victorian prejudices against women and the poor.






Edward Rochester



Jane’s employer and the master of Thornfield, Rochester is a wealthy, passionate man with a dark secret that provides much of the novel’s suspense. Rochester is unconventional, ready to set aside polite manners, propriety, and consideration of social class in order to interact with Jane frankly and directly. He is rash and impetuous and has spent much of his adult life roaming about Europe in an attempt to avoid the consequences of his youthful indiscretions. His problems are partly the result of his own recklessness, but he is a sympathetic figure because he has suffered for so long as a result of his early marriage to Bertha.



St. John Rivers



Along with his sisters, Mary and Diana, St. John (pronounced “Sinjin”) serves as Jane’s benefactor after she runs away from Thornfield, giving her food and shelter. The minister at Morton, St. John is cold, reserved, and often controlling in his interactions with others. Because he is entirely alienated from his feelings and devoted solely to an austere ambition, St. John serves as a foil to Edward Rochester.





Mrs. Reed



Mrs. Reed is Jane’s cruel aunt, who raises her at Gateshead Hall until Jane is sent away to school at age ten. Later in her life, Jane attempts reconciliation with her aunt, but the old woman continues to resent her because her husband had always loved Jane more than his own children.



Bessie Lee



The maid at Gateshead, Bessie is the only figure in Jane’s childhood who regularly treats her kindly, telling her stories and singing her songs. Bessie later marries Robert Leaven, the Reeds’ coachman.



Mr. Lloyd


Mr. Lloyd is the Reeds’ apothecary, who suggests that Jane be sent away to school. Always kind to Jane, Mr. Lloyd writes a letter to Miss Temple confirming Jane’s story about her childhood and clearing Jane of Mrs. Reed’s charge that she is a liar.



Georgiana Reed -



Georgiana Reed is Jane’s cousin and one of Mrs. Reed’s two daughters. The beautiful Georgiana treats Jane cruelly when they are children, but later in their lives she befriends her cousin and confides in her. Georgiana attempts to elope with a man named Lord Edwin Vere, but her sister, Eliza, alerts Mrs. Reed of the arrangement and sabotages the plan. After Mrs. Reed dies, Georgiana marries a wealthy man.



Eliza Reed


Eliza Reed is Jane’s cousin and one of Mrs. Reed’s two daughters (along with her sister, Georgiana). Not as beautiful as her sister, Eliza devotes herself somewhat self-righteously to the church and eventually goes to a convent in France where she becomes the Mother Superior.


John Reed

John Reed is Jane’s cousin, Mrs. Reed’s son, and brother to Eliza and Georgiana. John treats Jane with appalling cruelty during their childhood and later falls into a life of drinking and gambling. John commits suicide midway through the novel when his mother ceases to pay his debts for him.



Helen Burns


-
Helen Burns is Jane’s close friend at the Lowood School. She endures her miserable life there with a passive dignity that Jane cannot understand. Helen dies of consumption in Jane’s arms.



Mr. Brocklehurst



The cruel, hypocritical master of the Lowood School, Mr. Brocklehurst preaches a doctrine of privation, while stealing from the school to support his luxurious lifestyle. After a typhus epidemic sweeps Lowood, Brocklehurst’s shifty and dishonest practices are brought to light and he is publicly discredited.



Maria Temple


Maria Temple is a kind teacher at Lowood, who treats Jane and Helen with respect and compassion. Along with Bessie Lee, she serves as one of Jane’s first positive female role models. Miss Temple helps clear Jane of Mrs. Reed’s accusations against her.



Miss Scatcherd



Jane’s sour and vicious teacher at Lowood, Miss Scatcherd behaves with particular cruelty toward Helen.



Alice Fairfax

Alice Fairfax is the housekeeper at Thornfield Hall. She is the first to tell Jane that the mysterious
laughter often heard echoing through the halls is, in fact, the laughter of Grace Poole—a lie that Rochester himself often repeats.



Bertha Mason -
Rochester’s clandestine wife, Bertha Mason is a formerly beautiful and wealthy Creole woman who has become insane, violent, and bestial. She lives locked in a secret room on the third story of Thornfield and is guarded by Grace Poole, whose occasional bouts of inebriation sometimes enable Bertha to escape. Bertha eventually burns down Thornfield, plunging to her death in the flames.



Grace Poole


Grace Poole is Bertha Mason’s keeper at Thornfield, whose drunken carelessness frequently allows Bertha to escape. When Jane first arrives at Thornfield, Mrs. Fairfax attributes to Grace all evidence of Bertha’s misdeeds.



Adèle Varens


Jane’s pupil at Thornfield, Adèle Varens is a lively though somewhat spoiled child from France. Rochester brought her to Thornfield after her mother, Celine, abandoned her. Although Celine was once Rochester’s mistress, he does not believe himself to be Adèle’s father.



Celine Varens



Celine Varens is a French opera dancer with whom Rochester once had an affair. Although Rochester does not believe Celine’s claims that he fathered her daughter Adèle, he nonetheless brought the girl to England when Celine abandoned her. Rochester had broken off his relationship with Celine after learning that Celine was unfaithful to him and interested only in his money.



Sophie


Sophie is Adèle’s French nurse at Thornfield.




Richard Mason



Richard Mason is Bertha’s brother. During a visit to Thornfield, he is injured by his mad sister. After learning of Rochester’s intent to marry Jane, Mason arrives with the solicitor Briggs in order to thwart the wedding and reveal the truth of Rochester’s prior marriage.



Mr. Briggs



John Eyre’s attorney, Mr. Briggs helps Richard Mason prevent Jane’s wedding to Rochester when he learns of the existence of Bertha Mason, Rochester’s wife. After John Eyre’s death, Briggs ******es for Jane in order to give her her inheritance.



Blanche Ingram



Blanche Ingram is a beautiful socialite who des-pises Jane and hopes to marry Rochester for his money
.


Diana Rivers



Diana Rivers is Jane’s cousin, and the sister of St. John and Mary. Diana is a kind and intelligent person, and she urges Jane not to go to India with St. John. She serves as a model for Jane of an intellectually gifted and independent woman.



Mary Rivers



Mary Rivers is Jane’s cousin, the sister of St. John and Diana. Mary is a kind and intelligent young woman who is forced to work as a governess after her father loses his fortune. Like her sister, she serves as a model for Jane of an independent woman who is also able to maintain close relationships with others and a sense of meaning in her life.



Rosamond Oliver



Rosamond is the beautiful daughter of Mr. Oliver, Morton’s wealthiest inhabitant. Rosamond gives money to the school in Morton where Jane works. Although she is in love with St. John, she becomes engaged to the wealthy Mr. Granby.



John Eyre



John Eyre is Jane’s uncle, who leaves her his vast fortune of 20,000 pound
s.


Uncle Reed -


Uncle Reed is Mrs. Reed’s late husband. In her childhood, Jane believes that she feels the presence of his ghost. Because he was always fond of Jane and her mother (his sister), Uncle Reed made his wife promise that she would raise Jane as her own child. It is a promise that Mrs. Reed does not keep.


وهاذا الثيم


Themes

Themes are the fundamental and often universal ideas explored in a literary work.

Love versus Autonomy
Jane Eyre is very much the story of a quest to be loved. Jane ******es, not just for romantic love, but also for a sense of being valued, of belonging. Thus Jane says to Helen Burns: “to gain some real affection from you, or Miss Temple, or any other whom I truly love, I would willingly submit to have the bone of my arm broken, or to let a bull toss me, or to stand behind a kicking horse, and let it dash its hoof at my chest” (Chapter 8). Yet, over the course of the book, Jane must learn how to gain love without sacrificing and harming herself in the process.
Her fear of losing her autonomy motivates her refusal of Rochester’s marriage proposal. Jane believes that “marrying” Rochester while he remains legally tied to Bertha would mean rendering herself a mistress and sacrificing her own integrity for the sake of emotional gratification. On the other hand, her life at Moor House tests her in the opposite manner. There, she enjoys economic independence and engages in worthwhile and useful work, teaching the poor; yet she lacks emotional sustenance. Although St. John proposes marriage, offering her a partnership built around a common purpose, Jane knows their marriage would remain loveless.
Nonetheless, the events of Jane’s stay at Moor House are necessary tests of Jane’s autonomy. Only after proving her self-sufficiency to herself can she marry Rochester and not be asymmetrically dependent upon him as her “master.” The marriage can be one between equals. As Jane says: “I am my husband’s life as fully as he is mine. . . . To be together is for us to be at once as free as in solitude, as gay as in company. . . . We are precisely suited in character—perfect concord is the result” (Chapter 38).



تكفوووووووووون الله الله بالاختصارات الحلووه ياحلوين ومشكورين مقدما :smile (101):

ميرا فهد
19-05-2010, 06:30 PM
مووووووووووووووووووووووون اخواني اخزاتي هيلب مي تكفين قلبي ساعدني تكفين وربي الاستاذة تبيها عشان تشوف الامتحان تكفين الله يوفقك دوم اختي مون تكفين لاتنسيي ميرا فهد

M.o_o.N
20-05-2010, 12:58 AM
ميرا فهد



عزيزتي


خاسة ان الشروحات اللي فوق مرة مختصرة و بقوة مدري كيف بأختصرها أكثر من كذا ما عاد ينفع


بس تفضلي و ربي يوفقك

M.o_o.N
20-05-2010, 01:06 AM
الشخصيات بإختصار شديد




Jane Eyre



The protagonist of the novel, Jane is an intelligent & honestyoung girl forced to contend with oppression and hardship. Jane repeatedly succeeds at asserting herself and maintains her principles of justice, human dignity, and morality. She also values intellectual and emotional fulfillment. Her strong belief in gender and social equality challenges the Victorian prejudices against women and the poor.






Edward Rochester



Jane’s employer and the master of Thornfield, Rochester is a wealthy, passionate man with a dark secret . Rochester is unconventional, ready to set aside polite manners, propriety, and consideration of social class in order to interact with Jane frankly and directly. He has spent much of his adult life roaming about Europe in an attempt to avoid the consequences of his youthful indiscretions. His problems are partly the result of his own recklessness, but he is a sympathetic because he has suffered for so long as a result of his early marriage to Bertha.



St. John Rivers



Along with his sisters, Mary and Diana, St. John serves as Jane’s benefactor after she runs away from Thornfield, giving her food and shelter. The minister at Morton, St. John is cold, reserved, and often controlling in his interactions with others.



Mrs. Reed



Mrs. Reed is Jane’s cruel aunt, who raises her at Gateshead Hall until Jane is sent away to school at age ten.



Bessie Lee



The maid at Gateshead, Bessie is the only figure in Jane’s childhood who regularly treats her kindly,



Mr. Lloyd


Mr. Lloyd is the Reeds’ apothecary, who suggests that Jane be sent away to school. Always kind to Jane,



Georgiana Reed -



Georgiana Reed is Jane’s cousin and one of Mrs. Reed’s two daughters. The beautiful Georgiana treats Jane cruelly when they are children, but later in their lives she befriends her cousin and confides in her



Eliza Reed


Eliza Reed is Jane’s cousin and one of Mrs. Reed’s two daughters .Eliza devotes herself somewhat self-righteously to the church and eventually goes to a convent in France where she becomes the Mother Superior.



John Reed

John Reed is Jane’s cousin, Mrs. Reed’s son, and brother to Eliza and Georgiana. John treats Jane with appalling cruelty during their childhood and later falls into a life of drinking and gambling. John commits suicide .

Helen Burns


-
Helen Burns is Jane’s close friend at the Lowood School. She endures her miserable life there with a passive dignity that Jane cannot understand. Helen dies of consumption in Jane’s arms.



Mr. Brocklehurst



The cruel, hypocritical master of the Lowood School, Mr. Brocklehurst preaches a doctrine of privation, while stealing from the school to support his luxurious lifestyle.



Maria Temple


Maria Temple is a kind teacher at Lowood, who treats Jane and Helen with respect and compassion. Along with Bessie Lee, she serves as one of Jane’s first positive female role models.



Miss Scatcherd



Jane’s sour and vicious teacher at Lowood, Miss Scatcherd behaves with particular cruelty toward Helen.



Alice Fairfax

Alice Fairfax is the housekeeper at Thornfield Hall. She is the first to tell Jane that the mysterious
laughter often heard echoing through the halls.,



Bertha Mason -
Rochester’s clandestine wife, Bertha Mason is a formerly beautiful and wealthy Creole woman who has become insane, violent, and bestial. She lives locked in a secret room on the third story of Thornfield and is guarded by Grace Poole, whose occasional bouts of inebriation sometimes enable Bertha to escape. Bertha eventually burns down Thornfield, plunging to her death in the flames.



Grace Poole


Grace Poole is Bertha Mason’s keeper at Thornfield, whose drunken carelessness frequently allows Bertha to escape. When Jane first arrives at Thornfield, Mrs. Fairfax attributes to Grace all evidence of Bertha’s misdeeds.



Adèle Varens


Jane’s pupil at Thornfield, Adèle Varens is a lively though somewhat spoiled child from France. Rochester brought her to Thornfield after her mother, Celine, abandoned her. Although Celine was once Rochester’s mistress, he does not believe himself to be Adèle’s father.



Celine Varens



Celine Varens is a French opera dancer with whom Rochester once had an affair. Although Rochester does not believe Celine’s claims that he fathered her daughter Adèle, he nonetheless brought the girl to England when Celine abandoned her. Rochester had broken off his relationship with Celine after learning that Celine was unfaithful to him and interested only in his money.



Sophie


Sophie is Adèle’s French nurse at Thornfield.




Richard Mason



Richard Mason is Bertha’s brother. During a visit to Thornfield, he is injured by his mad sister. After learning of Rochester’s intent to marry Jane, Mason arrives with the solicitor Briggs in order to thwart the wedding and reveal the truth of Rochester’s prior marriage.



Mr. Briggs



John Eyre’s attorney, Mr. Briggs helps Richard Mason prevent Jane’s wedding to Rochester when he learns of the existence of Bertha Mason, Rochester’s wife.



Blanche Ingram



Blanche Ingram is a beautiful socialite who des-pises Jane and hopes to marry Rochester for his money
.


Diana Rivers



Diana Rivers is Jane’s cousin, and the sister of St. John and Mary. Diana is a kind and intelligent person, and she urges Jane not to go to India with St. John. She serves as a model for Jane of an intellectually gifted and independent woman.



Mary Rivers



Mary Rivers is Jane’s cousin, the sister of St. John and Diana. Mary is a kind and intelligent young woman who is forced to work as a governess after her father loses his fortune.


Rosamond Oliver



Rosamond is the beautiful daughter of Mr. Oliver, Morton’s wealthiest inhabitant. Rosamond gives money to the school in Morton where Jane works.



John Eyre



John Eyre is Jane’s uncle, who leaves her his vast fortune of 20,000 pound
s.


Uncle Reed -


Uncle Reed is Mrs. Reed’s late husband. In her childhood, Jane believes that she feels the presence of his ghost.
Uncle Reed made his wife promise that she would raise Jane as her own child. It is a promise that Mrs. Reed does not keep.

Petunia
20-05-2010, 01:17 AM
جزاك الله خير عزيزتي مووون ربي يوفقك حقيقه ماقصرتي




اختي ميرا فهد انا برأيي لو انك تفهمي المين كونسبت وبعدين تكتبيها بكلماتك حتكون

اسهل عليك وماراح تحتاجي ابدا لأي تلخيص


الله يوفقك وان شاء الله فل ماركز

ميرا فهد
21-05-2010, 03:45 PM
الف الف شكر اختى موووووون ما قصرتى الله يعطيك العافيه على هالاختصارات طيب ممكن تختارين لى اهم اربع شخصيااااات وبكوووووووون شااااااااكره لك واختى ما اختصرتى الثيم نسيتيه تكفين ممكن تختصرينه الله يسعدك يااااارب ويوفقك وييسر امرك ويرحم والديك يااااااااااااااااااارب *_^

ميرا فهد
21-05-2010, 03:52 PM
اختى pink _pen
ان شالله بحاول افهمه بس الشخصياااااات كثيره ويارب الله يسمع منك يااااارب فل مارك ومشكووووووره لتنويرك خيتووووو *_^