Investigating conceptualisations of the feminine creative imagination, this thesis examines representations of the Brontës and adaptations of their novels released between 1996 and 2011. I focus on portrayals of Charlotte and Anne Brontë alongside reworkings of Jane Eyre (1847) and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (1848) in various media. Contributing to existing research on the cultural afterlives of the Brontës and their novels, I position the works discussed within contemporary middlebrow culture whilst considering the influence of feminism. The Introduction discusses the gendering of creative genius before identifying the tensions between critical, middlebrow and popular discourses’ conceptualisations of the Brontës’ imaginations. Thereaf...
This thesis explores the relationship between faerie and power in the work of Charlotte Brontë. Focu...
Treball Final de Grau en Estudis Anglesos. Codi: EA0938. Curs acadèmic 2019/2020Middle-class women f...
Through her writing, Charlotte Bronte takes issue both with the masculinist assumption of Romanticis...
Investigating conceptualisations of the feminine creative imagination, this thesis examines represen...
Investigating conceptualisations of the feminine creative imagination, this thesis examines represen...
Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre: An Autobiography (1847) has been regularly adapted for the screen sinc...
The Brontë sisters have long been recognised as what some would call proto-feminist writers. Their l...
This project investigates how Jane Eyre and Villette, two of Charlotte Bronte’s famous gothic ...
An exploration into the complex underpinnings of an evolving mind, Jane Eyre is both a literal and m...
In “Haworth, November, 1904” (1904), Virginia Woolf maintains a literary pilgrimage “is legitimate w...
Since the 19th century, feminism has become one of the most important and popular topics. According ...
Since the 19th century, feminism has become one of the most important and popular topics. According ...
Since the 19th century, feminism has become one of the most important and popular topics. According ...
This thesis explores the relationship between faerie and power in the work of Charlotte Brontë. Focu...
This thesis discusses the most popular novels written by the Brontë sisters – Charlotte’s Jane Eyre,...
This thesis explores the relationship between faerie and power in the work of Charlotte Brontë. Focu...
Treball Final de Grau en Estudis Anglesos. Codi: EA0938. Curs acadèmic 2019/2020Middle-class women f...
Through her writing, Charlotte Bronte takes issue both with the masculinist assumption of Romanticis...
Investigating conceptualisations of the feminine creative imagination, this thesis examines represen...
Investigating conceptualisations of the feminine creative imagination, this thesis examines represen...
Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre: An Autobiography (1847) has been regularly adapted for the screen sinc...
The Brontë sisters have long been recognised as what some would call proto-feminist writers. Their l...
This project investigates how Jane Eyre and Villette, two of Charlotte Bronte’s famous gothic ...
An exploration into the complex underpinnings of an evolving mind, Jane Eyre is both a literal and m...
In “Haworth, November, 1904” (1904), Virginia Woolf maintains a literary pilgrimage “is legitimate w...
Since the 19th century, feminism has become one of the most important and popular topics. According ...
Since the 19th century, feminism has become one of the most important and popular topics. According ...
Since the 19th century, feminism has become one of the most important and popular topics. According ...
This thesis explores the relationship between faerie and power in the work of Charlotte Brontë. Focu...
This thesis discusses the most popular novels written by the Brontë sisters – Charlotte’s Jane Eyre,...
This thesis explores the relationship between faerie and power in the work of Charlotte Brontë. Focu...
Treball Final de Grau en Estudis Anglesos. Codi: EA0938. Curs acadèmic 2019/2020Middle-class women f...
Through her writing, Charlotte Bronte takes issue both with the masculinist assumption of Romanticis...