Emily Brontë
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Standard Name: Brontë, Emily
Birth Name: Emily Brontë
Pseudonym: Ellis Bell
Used Form: Emily Bronte
Used Form: Two
Emily Brontë
collaborated with her siblings on a body of juvenilia, and by herself wrote a small number of poems and a single surviving novel. Wuthering Heights is established as one of the most original and disturbing novels of the mid-nineteenth century. Its compelling imagery, sophisticated narrative technique, and powerful, indeed violent, story—part ghost story, part romance, part anatomy of social hierarchies and cultural conflict—details the enmity between two families on the Yorkshire moors that erupts when a strange child is adopted into one of them, and which is only resolved in the subsequent generation.
Connections
Connections | Author name Sort descending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Family and Intimate relationships | Dora Carrington | Their friendship was at first somewhat shaky, but warmed considerably. Writing in her diary on 6 June 1918, Woolf described DC
as such a bustling eager creature, so red & solid, & at the same... |
Health | Dora Carrington | Carrington attempted to give herself a miscarriage by riding a horse violently, and when this did not work she became depressed to a nearly suicidal degree. Gerzina, Gretchen. Carrington: A Life of Dora Carrington, 1893-1932. John Murray, 1989. 271-2 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Anne Carson | The contents of this book include some that have become central to the Carson canon, like The Glass Essay, a poem of love and desire, loss and rejection, whose speaker survives the end of... |
Education | Agatha Christie | By the time Agatha was born, Clara Miller
believed that girls ought not to learn to read before the age of eight. Defiantly, Agatha taught herself to read at five. She eagerly devoured Lewis Carroll |
Literary Setting | Kate Clanchy | Some stories concern painful and intractible moral and emotional dilemmas as they present themselves in ordinary life, like the inner defences automatically in place against believing that one's father has Alzheimer's. Several explore the relationship... |
Reception | Caroline Clive | Hailed by many as the first sensation novel, Paul Ferroll also marks the beginning of the popularization of a modern breed of villainous hero, Blain, Virginia et al., editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford, 1990. |
Literary responses | Ivy Compton-Burnett | This novel made the best-seller list the month after publication; but at the end of the year it received the Bookseller's Glass Slipper award for books whose sales had not reflected their quality. Reviewers... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Jeni Couzyn | Of the three poems in the final section, The Tarantula Dance takes up many of the volume's most disturbing images. It describes a catastrophic male-female relationship. The woman begins with a black aura, suffering... |
Performance of text | Clemence Dane | CD
's Wild Decembers, based on the lives of the BrontëEmily BrontëAnne BrontëBranwell Brontë
family, had its first performance, at the Apollo Theatre
, London. Weintraub, Stanley, editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 10. Gale Research, 1982. 10: 133 Demastes, William W., and Katherine E. Kelly, editors. British Playwrights, 1880-1956. Greenwood Press, 1996. 100 |
Textual Production | E. M. Delafield | In the same year, EMD
edited the book of literary criticism, The BrontëCharlotte BrontëEmily Brontë
s: Their Lives Recorded by Their Contemporaries, published by Hogarth Press
. OCLC WorldCat. 1992–1998, http://www.oclc.org/firstsearch/content/worldcat/. Accessed 1999. Zarin, Cynthia. “The Diarist: How E. M. Delafield Launched a Genre”. New Yorker, 9 May 2005, pp. 44-9. 49 |
Education | Anita Desai | Anita grew up with Urdu poetry and literature, but her nursery rhymes were German. Her father did not pass Bengali on to his children. Desai, Kiran. “In conversation: Kiran Desai meets Anita Desai”. Guardian.co.uk, 11 Nov. 2011. |
Textual Production | Anne Devlin | AD
adapted Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë
for Paramount Films
. The official title, for copyright reasons involving the film version of 1939, was Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights. The Internet Movie Database (IMDb). http://www.imdb.com. Schrank, Bernice, and William W. Demastes, editors. Irish Playwrights, 1880-1995. Greenwood Press, 1997. 95 “Anne Devlin”. Alan Brodie Representation. The Internet Movie Database (IMDb). http://www.imdb.com. |
Textual Features | Emily Dickinson | She began practising literary techniques in letters written to friends and family at this time. Evidence of a dialogic, corresponding voice permeates her poetry, resulting in what Archibald MacLeish
reads as one of the central... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Emily Dickinson | Among our contemporary poets, Adrienne Rich
has offered this reading of ED
's life and works: Emily Dickinson—viewed by her bemused contemporary Thomas Higginson as partially cracked, by the twentieth century as fey or... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Emily Dickinson | Because of the extent to which ED
's concentrated and elusive verse, as well as her dissent from religious and social orthodoxies, seem to presage modernism, she has been considered the sole serious writer among... |
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