EBOOK

Anne Brontë Reimagined

A View from the Twenty-first Century

Adelle Hay
(0)
Pages
240
Year
2020
Language
English

About

Anne: the boring Brontë? Or talented author, feminist, pioneer?

Anne's writing has often been compared harshly with that of Charlotte and Emily — used as a measure of her sisters' genius. But her literary and personal reputations have changed drastically since she was first published in 1846. 'Agnes Grey', with its governess protagonist, was assumed by some to be a first novel by Currer Bell. Reviews were mixed, some critical of 'crudeness' and 'vulgarity', yet the book sold well during Anne's lifetime. Her second and most famous work, 'The Tenant of Wildfell Hall', was groundbreaking in its choice of subject matter: marital abuse (physical and emotional); gender equality; education; alcohol abuse; and its effect on family life; and married women's rights — married women were then viewed as the property of their husband.
Anne's reputation changed from coarse and vulgar to strident, moralising, pious, reserved and, eventually, just plain boring. Who, then, was the real Anne, how was her reputation destroyed, and why has she been so overlooked?

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Reviews

"What pleases me most [of recent books on Anne] … and best reveals the sources of Anne's strength, is Hay's chapter on "Anne in Nature", with its sensitive readings of her poetry and novels."
Jacqueline Banerjee
"[Anne] is seen and shown to be ahead of her time and in this treatment, she finds an era in which her concerns, approach, philosophy and imagination ring truer than in her own ... as is not always the case with biographies, the subject is allowed to speak for herself ... well worth reading."
Helen Brown

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