When the heroine in classic literature becomes a teacher, I think it presents some inherent difficulty for modern readers. Because no matter how feminist the novel was or how empowered the heroine was by the standards of when it was written, a teacher can't entirely rebel against social standards. To some extent or other, teaching children to conform to expectations is a part of her job.
I just watched Dr. Octavia Cox's video about the "contradiction" between the feminist themes of Jane Eyre, with Jane's journey of personal empowerment, and the theme of Jane-as-governess taming AdĆØle's excessive liveliness and teaching her to be docile and obedient. Now, some would argue that there's no contradiction at all: Jane doesn't teach AdĆØle to let the world trample on her, she just teaches her not to be flighty and spoiled. Still, I understand Cox's argument. But the fact is that the very role of a governess, besides teaching academic subjects, was to teach her students to be proper, respectable, well-mannered young girls, according to the standards of their time, place, and status. To an extent, enforcing conformity is what Jane was hired to do. A governess who encouraged a little girl to be wild and outspoken would have been fired.
Then there's the common complaint about the ending of Little Women and Jo's choice to start a school for boys. "Why boys?" modern feminist fans demand; they insist that it should have been a school for girls, whom Jo would teach to be strong and independent like herself. But unless I'm mistaken, in the 19th century, that never would have worked. If Jo had opened a school for girls, she would have been expected to teach them to be proper young ladies. If she failed to do this ā which of course she would have ā then the school would have closed. Running a boys' school is what lets Jo be herself and take part in the "boy's games and work and manners" she enjoys, while still fulfilling the nurturing domestic role that society expects of her as a woman.
Of course that doesn't mean those books aren't feminist or empowering to women and girls. But if you want 19th century fiction that feels entirely feminist by modern standards ā if that were possible ā a book where the heroine becomes a teacher is never an ideal choice.
















