Charlotte Brontë

Charlotte Brontë by Carl Plasa, published by Macmillan Education UK on April 16, 2004, is a scholarly examination of the works of the renowned author. This edition spans 190 pages and is presented in English. Plasa offers a series of textually focused and historically grounded analyses of Brontë’s writings, exploring both her most celebrated novels, such as Jane Eyre and Villette, as well as lesser-known works, including her poetry and early essays.
Readers will find a comprehensive exploration of Brontë’s literary evolution, particularly in relation to themes of colonialism. Plasa’s study delves into the shifts in Brontë’s engagement with this topic, tracing the continuity and transformation in her writing from her early exuberance to the formal complexity of her later works. This analysis not only highlights the depth of Brontë’s literary contributions but also situates her within the broader context of 19th-century literary criticism and modern linguistic studies.
Official synopsis Publisher
The writings of Charlotte Brontë – a member of one of the great literary families – have inspired, fascinated and moved readers ever since their first publication in the mid-nineteenth century. In this new study, Carl Plasa elaborates a series of textually focused, historically grounded and theoretically informed analyses of the full range of the author’s texts. As well as providing original readings of Brontë’s four best known novels – The Professor, Jane Eyre, Shirley and Villette – attention is given to less familiar and critically neglected areas of Brontë’s work, such as the Ashanti narratives, the poetry and the Belgian essays of the early 1840s. Charlotte Brontë’s work has undergone a significant reassessment from a postcolonial critical perspective in recent years. By examining Brontë’s textual production from its exuberant and experimental beginnings to the formal complexity of Villette, her last completed novel, Plasa offers what is the most comprehensive exploration to date of the shifts in the writer’s engagement with the question of colonialism. In so doing, he brings to light the subtle relationships of continuity and transformation between the earlier and later stages of Brontë’s literary career and demonstrates the extent to which that career was sparked and driven by her ‘colonial imagination’.
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