Description
Reviews
Her scholarship is impressive. . . . Provides an immensely valuable record of what nineteenth-century English readers were thinking, and reminds us that Charlotte Bronte was one of them. . . . will become an indispensable resource for students of the Brontes and nineteenth-century culture. Glen shows us how, exactly, Bronte's novels are topical, and a picture of the age in which she lived and wrote emerges that is richer and more detailed than any we have previously had. * Janet Gezari, Essays in Criticism *
... the book is a treasure trove, with a tendency to dazzle and bewilder. Readers who would like an occasional look at the map will just have to be content to expect the unexpected. But neither this nor the weightiness of some sections should deter less academic readers who enjoy Charlotte Bronte's novels. They will find here a wealth of interest: in the unusual readings as much as in the contextual enquiries; in the imagination as much as in the history. * Bronte Studies *
... presents a Charlotte Bronte aware of and responsive to many of the cross-currents of her own time. Charlotte would surely expect us to read her novels in this context, and relate them to Byron, Thackeray, or Carlyle. This is what Heather Glen does in a book that ranges from Evangelical pedagogy to keepsake annuals and from millenarianism to the Great Exhibition. * Bronte Studies *
... a welcome and significant addition to the recent book-length studies of Charlotte Bronte's work. * Bronte Studies *
Book Information
ISBN 9780199272556
Author Heather Glen
Format Paperback
Page Count 328
Imprint Oxford University Press
Publisher Oxford University Press
Weight(grams) 469g
Dimensions(mm) 233mm * 155mm * 18mm