Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: picturing Charlotte Brontë
-
1 The ‘Charlotte’ cult: writing the literary pilgrimage, from Gaskell to Woolf -
2 The path out of Haworth: mobility, migration and the global in Charlotte Brontë’s Shirley and the writings of Mary Taylor -
3 Brontë countries: nation, gender and place in the literary landscapes of Haworth and Brussels -
4 Reading the revenant in Charlotte Brontë’s literary afterlives: charting the path from the ‘silent country’ to the seance -
5 Charlotte Brontë on stage: 1930s biodrama and the archive/museum performed -
6 ‘Poetry, as I comprehend the word’: Charlotte Brontë’s lyric afterlife -
7 The legacy of Lucy Snowe: reconfiguring spinsterhood and the Victorian family in inter-war women’s writing -
8 Hunger, rebellion and rage: adapting Villette -
9 The ethics of appropriation; or, the ‘mere spectre’ of Jane Eyre: Emma Tennant’s Thornfield Hall, Jasper Fforde’s The Eyre Affair and Gail Jones’s Sixty Lights -
10 ‘The insane Creole’: the afterlife of Bertha Mason -
11 Jane Eyre’s transmedia lives -
12 ‘Reader, I [shagged/beat/whipped/f****d/rewrote] him’: the sexual and financial afterlives of Jane Eyre - Appendix: Charlotte Brontë’s cultural legacy, 1848–2016
- References
- Index
(p.viii) Contributors
(p.viii) Contributors
- Source:
- Charlotte Brontë
- Author(s):
- Amber K. Regis, Deborah Wynne
- Publisher:
- Manchester University Press
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- Title Pages
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: picturing Charlotte Brontë
-
1 The ‘Charlotte’ cult: writing the literary pilgrimage, from Gaskell to Woolf -
2 The path out of Haworth: mobility, migration and the global in Charlotte Brontë’s Shirley and the writings of Mary Taylor -
3 Brontë countries: nation, gender and place in the literary landscapes of Haworth and Brussels -
4 Reading the revenant in Charlotte Brontë’s literary afterlives: charting the path from the ‘silent country’ to the seance -
5 Charlotte Brontë on stage: 1930s biodrama and the archive/museum performed -
6 ‘Poetry, as I comprehend the word’: Charlotte Brontë’s lyric afterlife -
7 The legacy of Lucy Snowe: reconfiguring spinsterhood and the Victorian family in inter-war women’s writing -
8 Hunger, rebellion and rage: adapting Villette -
9 The ethics of appropriation; or, the ‘mere spectre’ of Jane Eyre: Emma Tennant’s Thornfield Hall, Jasper Fforde’s The Eyre Affair and Gail Jones’s Sixty Lights -
10 ‘The insane Creole’: the afterlife of Bertha Mason -
11 Jane Eyre’s transmedia lives -
12 ‘Reader, I [shagged/beat/whipped/f****d/rewrote] him’: the sexual and financial afterlives of Jane Eyre - Appendix: Charlotte Brontë’s cultural legacy, 1848–2016
- References
- Index