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Character sketch of jean lomond

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Answered by aarohi1669
5

Miss Jean Brodie, an individualistic teacher of younger students at the Marcia Blaine School for Girls in Edinburgh, Scotland. Considered attractive because of her “Roman features” and brown hair coiling at the nape of her neck, Brodie is in her forties, an age that she regards as the prime of her life. She is an early admirer of Benito Mussolini, whom she credits with having eliminated unemployment and litter in the streets of Rome. She later extends her admiration to Adolf Hitler as well and is forced into early retirement. She considers her pupils to be “the crème de la crème” and has devoted her life to them. Her first lover, Hugh Carruthers, died during World War I; her second lover, Teddy Lloyd, is married. Longing for romance but deprived of it, Brodie attempts to live vicariously through the affairs of her students. Her plan for one of these affairs fails, however, and the other outlets for her passion—politics and her unusual approach to education—ultimately prove to be her undoing. Brodie dies shortly after World War II, still unmarried at the age of fifty-six and unable to understand how she could have been betrayed by one of her own students.

Answered by Anonymous
3

ANSWER:

Miss Jean Brodie, an individualistic teacher of younger students at the Marcia Blaine School for Girls in Edinburgh, Scotland. Considered attractive because of her “Roman features” and brown hair coiling at the nape of her neck, Brodie is in her forties, an age that she regards as the prime of her life. She is an early admirer of Benito Mussolini, whom she credits with having eliminated unemployment and litter in the streets of Rome. She later extends her admiration to Adolf Hitler as well and is forced into early retirement. She considers her pupils to be “the crème de la crème” and has devoted her life to them. Her first lover, Hugh Carruthers, died during World War I; her second lover, Teddy Lloyd, is married. Longing for romance but deprived of it, Brodie attempts to live vicariously through the affairs of her students. Her plan for one of these affairs fails, however, and the other outlets for her passion—politics and her unusual approach to education—ultimately prove to be her undoing. Brodie dies shortly after World War II, still unmarried at the age of fifty-six and unable to understand how she could have been betrayed by one of her own students.

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