This article argues that narratives of violence are fundamental to both the creation and dismantling of the Brontë myth. Perceptions of violence in the Brontë legacy have undergone a shift. Nineteenth-century responses initially deemed violence a coarse and unfeminine aspect of Anne, Charlotte, and Emily Brontë’s novels, but also one integral to the creation of their fictions and to visions of Haworth. Meanwhile, more recent neo-Victorian reimaginings of the Brontës’ works and lives often seek to reinstate and accentuate violence, partly to offer an apparently more ‘authentic’ depiction of the books and their authors. This essay considers how current narratives of violence connected to the Brontës can be contextualised through a focus on El...
This thesis explores the fictionalization of the Brontës by focusing on their cultural significance ...
Afterlives of the Brontës revisits the Brontë myth by uncovering new details about the Brontës’ re...
Charlotte Brontë’s writing has always been conscious of negotiating the truth and the idealistic. Br...
Violence is often associated with Anne, Charlotte, and Emily Brontë’s writing, yet there remains no ...
This article discusses the after-lives of Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre (1847) and Emily Brontë’s Wut...
The story of Charlotte, Emily and Anne Brontë has almost reached the status of myth. The story of th...
The murderess in the twenty-first century is a figure of particular cultural fascination; she is the...
Anne Brontë may be less famous than her sisters, but contemporary popular culture still makes many ...
Charlotte Brontё’s Villette (1853), her most painfully confessional, yet largely underestimated nove...
Anne Brontë died in 1848, having written two novels, Agnes Grey (1847) and The Tenant of Wildfell Ha...
The article looks at the Brontës' reasons for setting the action of their novels in the past, from t...
This thesis explores the relationship between faerie and power in the work of Charlotte Brontë. Focu...
Representations of disease and illness pervade the seven novels written by Anne, Emily, and Charlott...
This is the first comprehensive study of the Brontës' representations of masculinity. In it, I anal...
AN ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS OF KELLY LEEK, for the Master of Arts degree in English, presented on 5 No...
This thesis explores the fictionalization of the Brontës by focusing on their cultural significance ...
Afterlives of the Brontës revisits the Brontë myth by uncovering new details about the Brontës’ re...
Charlotte Brontë’s writing has always been conscious of negotiating the truth and the idealistic. Br...
Violence is often associated with Anne, Charlotte, and Emily Brontë’s writing, yet there remains no ...
This article discusses the after-lives of Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre (1847) and Emily Brontë’s Wut...
The story of Charlotte, Emily and Anne Brontë has almost reached the status of myth. The story of th...
The murderess in the twenty-first century is a figure of particular cultural fascination; she is the...
Anne Brontë may be less famous than her sisters, but contemporary popular culture still makes many ...
Charlotte Brontё’s Villette (1853), her most painfully confessional, yet largely underestimated nove...
Anne Brontë died in 1848, having written two novels, Agnes Grey (1847) and The Tenant of Wildfell Ha...
The article looks at the Brontës' reasons for setting the action of their novels in the past, from t...
This thesis explores the relationship between faerie and power in the work of Charlotte Brontë. Focu...
Representations of disease and illness pervade the seven novels written by Anne, Emily, and Charlott...
This is the first comprehensive study of the Brontës' representations of masculinity. In it, I anal...
AN ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS OF KELLY LEEK, for the Master of Arts degree in English, presented on 5 No...
This thesis explores the fictionalization of the Brontës by focusing on their cultural significance ...
Afterlives of the Brontës revisits the Brontë myth by uncovering new details about the Brontës’ re...
Charlotte Brontë’s writing has always been conscious of negotiating the truth and the idealistic. Br...