Violence and the Brontës
Language, Reception, Afterlives
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Publishing:30th Sep '25
£95.00
This title is due to be published on 30th September, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

The well-known and well-loved writings of Anne, Charlotte and Emily Brontë are full of violence. From the many battles waged in their early writings to the violent emotions and threats expressed in their published novels, the Brontës’ representations of brutality shocked Victorian reviewers and continue to surprise readers in the twenty-first century. Violence and the Brontës accounts for such intense reactions by reading the sisters’ literary violences as transformational, encompassing harm, pain and suffering while at times also signalling creativity and even renewal. Through a new reading of the Brontës’ major works, as well as film, stage and television adaptations, this book argues that violence is at the centre of the Brontës’ imaginative engagements with nineteenth-century life. In the process, it demonstrates how violence continues to be vital to interpreting the Brontës’ reception history and afterlives in modern culture.
From their first publication to the present day, generations of readers have been fascinated and troubled by the Brontë sisters’ depictions of violence. Sophie Franklin explores the ways in which ‘violence’ is differently configured within each of their works, and the problems it has posed for their later readers and critics. This absorbing and wide-ranging study sheds new light on the continuing strangeness of these well-known texts and the meanings they have come to bear. -- Heather Glen, University of Cambridge
ISBN: 9781399523004
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
288 pages