Thursday, May 31, 2012

A First American edition of Wuthering Heights under the hammer

An auction for book collectors today, March 31, at Freeman's, Philadelphia, including a first American edition of Wuthering Heights (by the author of Jane Eyre):

Sale No 1431 - Fine Books, Maps & Manuscripts
May 31 2012 10:00 - Main Floor Gallery

Lot 334

1 vol.
(Brontë, Anne.) Bell, Acton.
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1848.
1st American ed. 12mo, orig. dark brown cloth, spine gilt; head of spine just starting to chip, other light edge wear, 1 small blister to front joint. Scattered light foxing, faint dampstain to upper gutters of last 3rd of vol. 2pp adverts at back. Sound copy.

Estimate $500-800

Lot 335
1 vol.

(Brontë, Emily.) Wuthering Heights. A Novel.
New York: Harper & Brothers, 1848.
1st American ed. 12mo, orig. light brown cloth, spine gilt; head & foot of spine frayed - just touching gilt-lettering at foot, corners bumped, other occasional light edge wear, 1-inch portion of back hinge frayed & starting to chip, covers occasionally lightly scuffed, very slightly cocked. Moderate foxing to endpapers. Light to moderate foxing to title page, other scattered light foxing, faint dampstaining at upper gutters of p140- back endpaper - touching text in later pps. Former owner's pencil annotations on title-page.

Estimate $2,500-4,000
More information on MSNBC.

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Emma by...

It's summer reading suggestions time already. The Buffalo News recommends Margot Livesey's The Flight of Gemma Hardy:

The Flight of Gemma Hardy by Margot Livesey. Not a slavish parallel as April Lindner’s 2010 “Jane” was (with Mr. Rochester as a rock star), this marvelous, beautifully written update of Jane Eyre, set in Scotland, is at its best in Jane’s early years before she meets Livesey’s incarnation of Mr. Rochester. (Jean Westmoore)
We do agree about that last bit.

The Augusta Teen Issues Examiner's suggestions are addressed to teenagers.
If it was the romance element in "Twilight" that appealed to your teen, try a Gothic romance such as "Wuthering Heights" or a classic romance like Jane Austin's (sic) "Pride and Prejudice." (Amy Kelly)
And speaking of reading lists, a Bedford Today columnist comments on the list based on Scotland's reading choices (with The Da Vinci Code at the top).
So the top 10 is stuffed with titles that people probably haven’t read at all, but may well have caught as a film adaptation somewhere along the line.
And the only classics that don’t fit easily into that category are the slim volumes that regularly feature on the English syllabus at schools.
So we’ve got The Lion, The Witch And The Wardrobe, Tolkein (sic), a slim showing for Dickens and one of the Brontë brood, along with Orwell’s 1984 and Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird.
But if he's outraged about that, we don't know what he'd make of the following blunder from The Irish World:
The live drama was filmed in Dublin and Londonand stars Louise Dylan in the lead role (Louise starred in the 2009 TV production of Emma by Charlotte Brontë). (Madeline O'Connor)
Ah, these old authors, all naming the books the same names!

Dodging Machetes: How I Survived Forbidden Love, Bad Behavior, and the Peace Corps in Fiji by Will Lutwick is according to the promotional press release,
in the tradition of classic star-crossed love stories such as “Wuthering Heights” and “West Side Story” with two exceptions – it really happened and between the dramatic scenes, Lutwick’s writing is quite funny.
The Yorkshire Evening Post publishes a letter from a reader on the Eurovision song contest:
the overall winner from Sweden looking like an escapee from Wuthering Heights! (Edna Levi)
Les lettres d'Odessa loves Wuthering Heights. Jane Eyre is one of Death Author's favourite fictional female characters. Filmifriik writes in Estonian about Jane Eyre 2011. The Bookworm Chronicles discusses Wide Sargasso Sea and Moonlight Reader posts about Eve Marie Mont's A Breath of Eyre. The Secret Writer posts briefly about Juliet Barker's The Brontës.

Annual Brontë Weekend to Take Place in Haworth

A press release from the Brontë Society:

Annual Brontë Weekend to Take Place in Haworth
8-10 June 2012

A special programme of events is planned to take place in Haworth from Friday 8 to Sunday 10 June 2012 as part of the annual Brontë Society weekend, which will see writers, academics and Brontë Society members visit Haworth from all over the world.

The weekend opens on the afternoon of Friday 8 June with a talk by Michael Slater onCharles Dickens and the Brontës’ at 2pm. The talk, which takes place as part of the Dickens 2012 celebrations and is on the eve of Dickens’ death, will look at the incredible impact that both Dickens and the Brontës have had on national culture. Michael Slater is Emeritus Professor of Victorian Literature at Birkbeck College, University of London and a renowned Dickens scholar, publishing his acclaimed biography Charles Dickens in 2009. Places for this talk are still available and tickets are £6.

The weekend continues with an annual service of remembrance at the Parish Church of St Michael and All Angels, Haworth on Saturday 9 June at 11.15am, and all are welcome. The address will be given by Reverend Peter Mayo-Smith, Rector of Haworth, and will celebrate the bicentenary of Patrick and Maria Brontë’s wedding.

On Saturday 9 June at 8pm, a special evening event will explore the themes of race and slavery in Wuthering Heights. The casting of a mixed race Heathcliff in Andrea Arnold’s 2011 film adaptation of Wuthering Heights put issues of race into the spotlight. The documentary A Regular Black: The Hidden Wuthering Heights examines themes of slavery and race coded into the text, and uncovers parallels between the fictional Earnshaws and the slave-owning families of Yorkshire. Following a screening of the documentary, panellists Terry Eagleton, Bonnie Greer and Caryl Phillips will tease out some of the themes. The evening will offer a fascinating new reading of the novel, and the audience will be invited to join in the debate. Tickets are £12.

All events except for the church service will take place at the West Lane Baptist Centre in Haworth. For further details or to make a booking contact jenna.holmes@bronte.org.uk/ 01535 640188.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Welcome to the Brontës' hometown

Empire's Under the Radar looks at the Cannes winners:

. . .but the decision to give Best Director to Carlos Reygadas for his baffling Post Tenebras Lux split the critics in two. Some found it brilliant, edgy and unsettling. I left after half an hour, not because I couldn't stand it (I couldn't) or because there was a completely unnecessary (offscreen) dog beating, but because Reygadas's weird lens thing (like looking through a Coke bottle) was giving me a headache. It reminded me of Andrea Arnold's Wuthering Heights, which I didn't like either. Interestingly, Arnold was on the jury, so maybe she saw the similarities too. (Damon Wise)
And we like how this Daily Astorian journalist has phrased the following in an article about a local teacher taking a literature course at Oxford this summer:
The most English literature comes in Billett’s 10th-grade honors English course, including Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol” and “A Tale of Two Cities” and Emily Brontë’s “Wuthering Heights.” [...]
After completing the course at Oxford, Billett will travel to English locales such as Yorkshire, hometown of 19th century literary sisters Charlotte (“Jane Eyre”) and Emily (“Wuthering Heights”) Brontë. . . (Edward Stratton)
Lovely - Yorkshire, hometown of the Brontës. We see that as their new slogan.

The Brontë Parsonage Blog posts about Tracy Forster's Brontës' Yorkshire Garden. The Brontë Sisters mourned the death anniversary of Anne Brontë yesterday. Potluck Suicide didn't like Jane Eyre 2011 while Flickr user LAVIsujiro has been inspired by it. Flickr user Dermotk has uploaded several pictures of Haworth and the moors.

More Talks

More recent Brontë-related talks:

February 23-25, 2012
The Louisville Conference on Literature and Culture since 1900
University of Louisville

- Follow this Fellow: Re-Tracing Brontë's Narrative in Jean Rhys's Wide Sargasso Sea,  Laura Quinlan DeJong, Florida Atlantic University
October 21, 2011
20th Annual Women & Society Conference
Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY

- The Transgression of Gender Boundaries in George Eliot’s Middlemarch, Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre, and Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse, Lisa Downward, Marist College
6-8 May 2012 Prague, Czech Republic 
4th Global Conference
Evil, Women and the Feminine

- (De)Constructing Evil: Bertha Mason’s Madness in Jane Eyre and Wide Sargasso Sea,  Kirsti Cole, Minnesota State University, USA
This presentation explores the ways in which madness is constructed as a rhetorical tool for demonising the racial other in Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre (1847) and Jean Rhys’ prequel Wide Sargasso Sea (1966). Wide Sargasso Sea tells the story of Antoinette Cosway’s life prior to her appearance as Mr. Rochester’s violently insane wife in Jane Eyre. The details of Cosway’s life, as provided by Rhys’s narrator, afford a template through which to problematise the ways in which the character is presented by Jane Eyre in Brontë’s novel. Antoinette, renamed Bertha by Mr. Rochester, is constructed as an object to be feared at best, something evil and monstrous at worse. Rhys’ narrator reconfigures the character of Bertha Mason, and offers a complicated commentary on the fear of women’s sexuality when the woman is outside of dominant, normative constructs surround class, race, and religion.
October 12 - 13, 2011
University Writing and Research Conference
The George Washington University

- Forever and Always, Jane Eyre: Creating and Defending a New Take on Brontë's Classic, Lauren Russell
- Jane Eyre Rewrite and Defense, Alexey Strakovsk
- In-Sufficiently Docile: Animating the Doll of Jane Eyre,  Morgan Viehman
26 March 2011  
Neo-Victorian art and aestheticism
University of Hull

- The Uses of Portraiture in Brontë Fictional Biography of the Interwar Period, Amber Theresa Pouliot, University of Leeds

Monday, May 28, 2012

Key Setting

BBC News reports the People's Choice Award of the Brontës' Yorkshire Garden at the recent Chelsea Flower Show:

A garden created by the tourism agency Welcome to Yorkshire has won the People's Choice Award at the Chelsea Flower Show for a third year in a row.
More than 11,000 members of the public took part in poll which saw the garden inspired by the Brontë sisters win.
The artisan garden is based on Top Withens, a location which is thought to be a key setting for Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights.
In addition, last week the garden was awarded gold in its category.
The Telegraph talks about the recent Cannes Film Festival 2012 awards:
Carlos Reygadas taking the Best Director Award for the highly experimental and enthusiastically booed Post Tenebras Lux was another left-field choice, although its awestruck lensing of nature in all its brutal glory may well have found favour with jury member Andrea Arnold, whose own (vastly superior) Wuthering Heights adaptation was cut from similar cloth. (Robbie Collin)
Austin Classics Movie Examiner takes a look at Orson Welles's filmography:
Jane Eyre: Still svelte enough to play a romantic lead, Orson starred opposite Joan Fontaine in this adaptation of Charlotte Brontë's novel, with a screenplay by Aldous Huxley and Welles' Mercury Theater collaborator John Houseman.  (JM Dobies)
The Huffington Post describes a trip to Wales. Discussing hotels:
The Castle Hotel in Conwy: Past guests include the 18th-century author and lexicographer Samuel Johnson, Victorian poet Charlotte Brontë and poet William Wordsworth.  (C.M. Rubin)
Certainly Charlotte Brontë spent her first honeymoon night in Conway (the English spelling in those days) and it probably was at the Castle Hotel.

Daily Kos's Readers and Book Lovers discusses first books read:
My father, who loved English literature, did not believe in holding children back when they exhibited signs of intellectual curiosity.  He gave me Jane Eyre to read when I was only eight. Of course, I didn't understand it all--that came later, when I reread the book from time to time when I was growing up.  Even at eight, though, I could appreciate what a horrible life Jane lived, both at Gateshead and Lowood.  (Diana in NoVa)
Wilson Exclusive Talent Productions ... Fighting Ignorance Through The Arts post some pictures of the Brontë: A Portrait of Charlotte opening night; Ženskikafe (in Czech) reviews Jane Eyre 2011; The Un-book Club reviews Syrie James's The Secret Diaries of Charlotte Brontë; African Angle posts about the Brontë novels; psicologadispersa (in Spanish) and The Scriptorium (in French) post about Jane EyreInvierno en 1882 (in Spanish) reviews Jane Eyre 1996 and Litteranet (in Spanish) reviews Jane Eyre 2011; Zksiazkami (in Polish) posts The Tenant of Wildfell Hall. Finally The Inn at Lambton (in French) has concluded its Jane Eyre 2012 Marathon.

Anne has been in Scarborough for 163 years

Picture source
On a day like today in 1849 Anne Brontë died in Scarborough, a place she loved, where she was buried.

The headstone chosen and 'revised' (a mistake still remains) by Charlotte is finally crumbling to pieces,. The text is not-so-slowly being erased and he headstone will sooner or later be in such a state as those surrounding Anne's grave. The Brontë Society have now placed a plaque displaying the text and telling visitors about Anne's actual age.

We like to think that in these 163 years since her death, Anne Brontë's reputation as a writer has undergone as many changes as her resting place: there used to be iron railings around it which were removed in World War Two; there used to be a border made of bricks which was removed in order to bring the grave closer to the spot Charlotte would have known and visited; the headstone used to be readable, carefully looked after by the Brontë Society and now there is this new plaque. The look of the place changes but she is still down there much like approaches to her work change (and fortunately it looks like more people are starting to appreciate them) but her honest words remain the same. The rest is all on the surface.

EDIT: Edwin Stockdale contributes with this poem to the anniversary:

St. Mary’s Church, Scarborough
This churchyard is scattered
with grains of sand
blown from the beach below.

Edward and Agnes stroll
up the hill. He takes her arm,
the sea a splash of kingfisher.

In a quiet corner nestles the headstone
overlooked by the castle
perched on the hill.

Anne stands on the front
feeling sand between her toes,
sea breezes cup her sunken cheeks.

Breakers sound as her wheezing breath.
She watches the brilliant sunset,
the sea violet.

Readersforum's Blog and Carole's Chatter join in the remembrance.

Melodramatic Impulse and Talks

A recent paper:

“Unconditionally and Irrevocably”: Theorizing the Melodramatic Impulse in Young Adult Literature through the Twilight Saga and Jane Eyre
Katie Kapurch
Children's Literature Association Quarterly
Volume 37, Number 2, Summer 2012
pp. 164-187

(...) Intriguingly, Twilight fan responses are comparable to reader sympathy with another pair of fictional lovers: first-person narrator Jane Eyre and the secretive, brooding Edward Rochester, who, like Edward Cullen, also happens to be ridden with guilt and in need of salvation only the heroine can supply. Sandra M. Gilbert offers a central insight into the appeal of Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre (1847), explaining how the novel challenged Victorian literary norms in part through the intensity of characters’ expressive discourse, another tenet of melodrama:
Unlike most of her predecessors, too, [Brontë] endowed her main characters—hero as well as heroine—with overwhelmingly powerful passions that aren’t always rational and often can’t be articulated in ordinary language. This sense of unspeakable depth or fiery interiority imbues both Rochester and Jane with a kind of mystery that has always been charismatic to readers.
Accounting for Jane Eyre’s sustained popularity, Gilbert identifies the main characters’ passionate feelings as part of the reason for female readers’ continued captivation with Brontë’s text (357). One cannot deny the phenomenal (and global) popularity of Meyer’s series for contemporary readers, particularly (though not limited to) Western girls and adult women, who may be compelled by textual qualities that mirror those in Jane Eyre.
While the Twilight and Jane Eyre readerships are not identical and cannot be regarded as one homogenous group, awareness of their sympathetic and empathetic reactions permits us to consider both texts through the framework of melodrama. As works characterized not only by similar heroines, heroes, and romantic plots, Brontë’s and Meyer’s novels share a melodramatic reader response. An exploration of melodrama’s significance in these female coming-of-age stories,...
And some recent talks:
March 21-24, 2012
Nineteenth Century Studies Association 34th Annual Conference
Fresno, California

- The Spiritual Quest of Helen Huntington (Brontë), Tomaro Scadding, California State University, Fresno
- Combative Spiritualism in Charlotte Brontë’s Villette, Leila May, North Carolina State University
Black Magic Woman: Christophine on Celluloid in John Duigan’s Film Adaptation of Jean Rhys’s Wide Sargasso Sea, Caron Knauer, LaGuardia Community College
18-20 April, 2012
Conference Identity, Migration and Diaspora: New Sexualities and Gender Identities
The Iberian Association for Cultural Studies
University of Málaga, Spain

- Lust and Sexuality in Brontë’s Jane Eyre and Rhy’s (sic) Antoinette Mason., María José Coperías Aguilar, Universitat de València (Spain)
- Sexuality and Gender Identity in Jane Eyre and Wide Sargasso Sea, Lucía García Magaldi, Universidad de Córdoba.
March 22-25, 2012

INCS 2012:  Picturing the Nineteenth Century
University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY



- Still Life: The Ethics of Absorption in Charlotte Brontë’s Villette, Elisha Cohn, Cornell University
- Who I am, I Left Behind: The Buried Artist in Jane Eyre, Carol MacKay, University of Texas at Austin
- Broadway’s ‘Jane! Jane!’: Victorian Feminism, Impressionism, and the Gothic in Jane Eyre:  The Musical, Sharon Aronofsky Weltman, Louisiana State University
- Wuthering Heights, Landscape, and the Ideology of the Picturesque, Keya Kraft, Washington University
November 4-6, 2011
Hosted by Indiana State University
57th Annual Mid-West Conference on British Studies
Terre Haute, hosted by Indiana State University

- ‘I began to see’: Biblical Models of Disability in Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre, Essaka Joshua, University of Notre Dame
- Sir Charles Bell, Jane Eyre, and a New System of ‘Natural Sympathy’, Rebecca Summerhays, Harvard University
- The Wife and the Widow: Coverture Law in Wuthering Heights and Middlemarch, Jennifer Swartz, Lake Erie College
11-14 August, 2011
NASSR 19th Annual Conference
Park City, Utah (co-hosted by Brigham Young University and the University of Utah)

Negotiating Gendered Capital in Maria Edgeworth’s Belinda and Charlotte Brontë’s Juvenilia, Sara D. Nyffenegger, University of Zurich

Sunday, May 27, 2012

Brontë hat trick

ITV News also covers the Yorkshire Brontës' Garden:

Welcome to Yorkshire has scored a Chelsea hat trick and made Chelsea Flower Show history by becoming the first exhibitor to win the People’s Choice award three years in a row. The Brontës' Yorkshire Garden, inspired by the literary legends and theirbwork, won the 2012 award as voted for by the public – mirroring the success of the tourism agency’s previous two gardens. The win comes just days after the same garden won Gold, capping off a memorable week for the county. The garden is basedbon a particular location often visited by the Bronte sisters, where a bridge now known as The Brontë Bridge crosses a moorland stream. This is now a popular tourist destination, being located on the path to the location widely believed to be a key setting for Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights, Top Withens. Stone from a Victorian quarry near the Bronte’s home in Haworth was also included in the garden; it was transported from Dove Stones moor to London to give the garden authenticity.
Tuscaloosa News reviews The Healing by Jonathan Odell:
Becky dies and Mistress Amanda goes mad, like a character in a Brontë novel. Addicted to laudanum, she staggers around the house with her pet monkey, Daniel Webster, and tries to substitute the slave Yewande for her dead daughter, dressing her up from time to time in Becky's fine clothes.  (Don Noble)
The singer Kelly Clarkson is interviewed in the Daily Mail:
I’m an avid reader now but had to be forced to pick up a book as a child. Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë was the first book that really touched me.  (Alan Jackson)
The Boston Globe interviews Kathleen Turner, not the actress but the Massachusetts teacher of the year:
When you read in English, what kind of books do you like?
TURNER: I go from mysteries by James Patterson and Patricia Cornwell to this year rereading “Jane Eyre” and “Wuthering Heights.” I also read Margaret Mitchell’s “Gone with the Wind” for the first time. I loved it. (Amy Sutherland)
A reader of the Dallas Morning News is concerned about the absence of new classics:
There have been no recent works, in my opinion, that have been able to rival those magnificent life-influencing characters found in the fictional classics. 
As a sophomore and junior in high school over five decades ago, my life was greatly changed forever by the love of Eppie and her ability to restore life and love to Silas Marner, by Jane Eyre's moral convictions that superseded her own personal desires, by Hester Prynne's bravery and courage to daily face a cruel society in The Scarlet Letter, and by Sydney Carton's sacrificial life and love in A Tale of Two Cities. These are only a few of the fictional characters who have powerfully molded my life. (Marty Walker)
The Danbury News Time lists some favorite sex scenes in cinema, including Wide Sargasso Sea 1992, recommended because of Karina Lombard; Cupcake and a Latte reviews Eve Marie Mont's A Breath of EyreMy Daily Life and My Blog post about Wuthering Heights; Magia... e vida (in Portuguese) devotes an entry to its author and Doll Divas has a doll-related post; deluminators is reading The Tenant of Wildfell Hall; Fascinating-History and Page Turners (in French) posts about Jane EyreSeongyong's Private Place reviews Wuthering Heights 2011.

Emily Brontë's poems in Catalan

A bilingual (Catalan-English) edition of a selection of Emily Brontë's poems has just been published. The publishers announce an upcoming Spanish translation too:

L'hora atroç
Poemes d'Emily Brontë
Translated by Robert Langarita
Editorial Pendragón

Presentem un recull dels poemes d’Emily Brontë en edició bilingüe perquè el lector pugui gaudir de la musicalitat dels versos originals. La selecció ha estat feta amb la intenció última que el lector conegui millor i de manera còmoda l’autora de Cims borrascosos i el germen d’una tal obra mestra; ella, la seva personalitat i el seu geni són el nostre màxim interès
Rescatem especialment els poemes que han fet d’Emily Brontë l’autora gòtica que continua inspirant i atraientnos per la seva foscor, el seu hermetisme i la seva reserva. I no només pel recurrent tema de la mort, sinó també per la inquietant experiència que té per primera vegada amb dinou anys, que s’anirà repetint fins gairebé la seva mort i que esdevindrà el fet més transcendent de la seva vida: les visites del seu àngel radiant.
A brief comment can be read on El Mundo (via the publishers' Facebook) where you can also find some very nice pictures of the book's release on Sant Jordi 2012.

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Gardens and Bluebells

The Royal Horticultural Society remember how

The Brontës’ Yorkshire garden is the 2012 RHS People's Choice for small gardens - chosen from the Fresh, Artisan and Generation garden categories.
Horticultural Week also mentions the Brontës' garden, designed  by Tracy Foster and Rebecca Chesney from the Brontë Weather Project has visited it. Welcome to Yorkshire has pictures of the garden and the winners.

The Times talks about female writers to coincide with the Orange Prize:
Charlotte Brontë and Elizabeth Gaskell sometimes stayed in each other’s homes, but they were more acquaintances than friends (Emily Midorikawa and Emma Sweeney)
Let's not abandon flowers, The Telegraph has an article about the most English of wild flowers, the bluebell:
For its fleeting appearance is part of the bluebell’s magic. Like spring itself, it never lasts long. There is a sad joy about it which is, no doubt, why it so appealed to the Brontë sisters.
Anne — on her way to York to become a governess — was characteristically gloomy until she “looked upon a bank” and her “wandering glances fell upon a little trembling flower, a single sweet bluebell”. The sight cheered her up no end, which — bearing in mind Anne Brontë’s character — was a wonderful achievement in itself.
Financial Times reviews The Colour of Milk by Nell Leyshon:
The Colour of Milk has occasional Brontë-esque undertones, from nods to Charlotte’s sexual politics to Emily’s rural imagery. It is above all a disturbing statement on the social constraints faced by 19th-century women. (Maria Crawford)
The Austin Chronicle lists Now Now Oh Now in its theatre section:
They used to call it CL1000P, but now the Rude Mechs have transformed those earlier workshops into their newest multivalenced spectacle. This full production – inspired by evolutionary biology, the Brontës, and Live Action Role Playing communities – weaves together "a locked room puzzle, a lecture on sexual selection in evolutionary biology, and the world's weirdest night of Dungeons and Dragons."
The Guardian talks about the Stanza Stones project in West Yorkshire:
The contrast always seems so severe. You start down in the valley: it's steep-sided and dark, choked with lines of sooty stone houses that press up against the canal, the road and the river. Then you blast up through some woods and emerge in outer space, a place filled with light, cloud and long views. No wonder West Yorkshire has been jangling the literary nerve for generations, squeezing prose and poetry from residents pent up in the valley but with a yearning for the hills. Now I'd come out with friend and part-time poet Peter Finch, who lives locally, to find a few verses that had escaped up on to the moors, words written by Simon Armitage that have been inscribed on six rocks across a 47-mile route that snakes through the territories of Ted Hughes and the Brontës.
Counterpunch reviews The Last Warner Woman by Kei Miller:
The narration skips back and forth in time (beginning in the 1940s and ending, roughly, forty years later) and introduces the narrator known as The Writer Man.  He collects the stories of Adamine, her mother, and numerous other characters, including several in Britain after Adamine has agreed to become the wife of a Jamaican who has recently lost his wife.  But well before we hear of that marriage we learn that Adamine has been placed in a mental institution in Britain, a horrifying mirroring of her mother’s own situation in the leprosarium, a generation earlier.  Milton Dehaney, the husband, has had her incarcerated because she talks back to him.  Shades of Jane Eyre, which has already been glossed earlier in the story.  Miss Lilly, one of the lepers, read and re-read Charlotte Brontë’s novel obsessively.  The book couldn’t be taken away from her. (Charles R. Larson)
Salon wonders whether the Harry Potter or Twilight sagas are serious enough to enter scholar studies:
Twilight,” which I suspect will have an even greater impact on America’s book culture because of the fan networks it has inspired, is doubly damned as unserious because it’s not only “for children” (that is, teenagers), but it’s also a romance, surely the most reflexively disdained of all literary genres. Throughout the early 19th century, all novels were seen in more or less this light: as fanciful stories read by silly women seeking escape from sterner truths, women all too prone to absorbing dangerously misguided notions of life and love. (For the record, I tend to agree with the later opinion, but that doesn’t mean I think “Wuthering Heights” beneath scholar interest.) As recently as the 1930s, it was controversial for any novel at all to be assigned to students at Oxford. Novels were regarded as recreational reading, not matter for significant study.  (Laura Miller)
The Huffington Post has an article about the decline and failure of male role models for young boys:
Schools too, are increasingly becoming a place where men aren't present either as mentors or role models. According to the National Education Association the number of male teachers is approaching a 40-year low. With reading assignments with heroines, like Wuthering Heights, and the removal of recess and hands-on learning, it's becoming difficult for boys to find any subject in school that's interesting to them or that stimulates their imaginations.  (Dr. Philip Zimbardo & Nikita Duncan)
We rather think that Wuthering Heights is not exactly a good example of a heroine-like book.

The National Business Review (New Zealand) publishes an article about E L James Fifty Shades of Grey:
Mr Grey descends from a long line of damaged heroes with lots of money who have set feminine hearts aflutter since the 1800s.
Remember Heathcliff (who wasn't very fanciable until he went off and made a fortune), Mr Rochester, from Jane Eyre , Max de Winter at Mandalay and, of course, the incomparable Rhett Butler in Gone with the Wind.
In these books sex was alluded to, but not explicated. In these less imaginative times there is a need out there for well written literature that includes lots of great sex. (Lorraine Craighead)
The Wichita Falls Times Record reviews the film The Woman in Black:
The British moors are scary.
Case in point: "An American Werewolf in London," in which a werewolf attacks two American college students who fail to heed the warnings of the pub locals to not hike through the moors at night.
Second case in point: "Wuthering Heights" and multiple sightings of Cathy's ghost — yes, again on the British moors.
And then there's "The Hound of the Baskervilles." (Lana Sweeten-Shults)
Psychology Today begins an article with an Emily Brontë quote:
If I could I would always work in silence and obscurity, and let my efforts be known by their results - Emily Brontë. (Christopher Peterson)
Nonfiction (France) comments on a new edition of Virginia Woolf's works in French and begins the article like this:
“Laissés dans le train, oubliés dans un meuble, feuilletés, déchirés et finissant en lambeaux, les anciens volumes ont fait leur temps, et pour les nouveaux arrivants dans leurs nouvelles demeures se préparent de nouvelles éditions, prélude à de nouvelles lectures et à de nouveaux amis” . C’est par ces mots que Virginia Woolf accueillait les rééditions de Jane Austen, des sœurs Brontë et de George Meredith en 1922.
L'étrange bibliothèque de Calenwen (in French) and Integrated Skills post about Wuthering Heights; Victorian 9322 uploads two video tutorials of a Charlotte Brontë-inspired make-up and hair; the Bydgoszcz Gazeta (in Polish) talks about Wuthering Heights 2011.

John Williams's Jane Eyre re-issued

La La Land Records releases of a limited edition of a remastered edition of the Jane Eyre 1970 soundtrack by John Williams:

Jane Eyre: Limited Edition

Limited Edition of 2000 Units

La-La Land Records and Capitol Records presents a remastered re-issue of acclaimed composer John Williams' (War Horse, Schindler's List, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Star Wars, Jaws) original score to the 1971 feature film period drama Jane Eyre, starring George C. Scott and Susannah York, and directed by Delbert Mann. Considered by many to be one of Williams' finest scores, this re-issue was remastered by Doug Schwartz from the 1/4" 2 track stereo album masters housed in the Capitol/EMI vaults. Sadly, the complete, recorded score has been lost to the ages, but this re-issue sounds better-than-ever and features stunning art design by Jim Titus and exclusive, in-depth liner notes by Williams historian Jeff Eldridge (the original LP liners are included as well). Produced by Lukas Kendall, this special re-issue is limited to 2000 units.

Track Listing:
  1. Love Theme from Jane Eyre 3:15
  2. Overture (Main Title) 3:55
  3. Lowood 2:25
  4. To Thornfield 1:51
  5. Festivity at Thornfield 2:08
  6. Grace Poole and Mason's Arrival 3:00
  7. Meeting 3:07
  8. Thwarted Wedding 2:37
  9. Across the Moors 2:37
  10. Restoration 3:56
  11. Reunion (End Title) 4:22
Total Album Time: 33:42
More information on the NY Film Music Examiner and a review:
This wonderful reissue by LaLaLand Records features a bright new sound to the music which sounds far suprior to the original releases by Silva Screen and it's an important release of Williams' grand early masterwork to which he had to sit down and listen and reorchestrate the score from to create the suite of music for his concerts in the future. The sad part is that the album couldn't be further expanded due to the original tapes lost to age, still this album is still a marvellous and elegant work that really deserves to be rediscovered once again. (Danny Gonzalez)

Friday, May 25, 2012

Redolent of the Brontës

The Telegraph wonders whether 'we read too much into writers' houses'.

These, and perhaps one of the most famous of all pilgrimage sites, the Brontë house in Haworth, are redolent of the figures they commemorate. (Philip Hensher)
While Flavorwire considers Wuthering Heights one of '10 Epidemically Overrated Books'  (her loss):
Wuthering Heights, Emily Brontë
Why is this book considered one of the most classic romances of all time? All of the characters are despicable and cruel to one another, the plot is awkwardly structured, and it’s all very boring and depressing, if you ask us. We realize that at the time of its writing, the book was groundbreaking,  and we certainly thank the Brontë sisters for their contribution to women being recognized as great authors, but seriously, it’s 165 years later, so why are we all still reading this book? (Emily Temple)
We and all the readers of this blog are the anwer to the question.

A reader of the Batley and Birstall News looks at the anniversaries celebrated in 2012, such as
In the Spen Valley we have celebrated the Luddite rising of 200 years ago which resulted in the attack on Rawfolds Mill. [...]
December 29 sees the 200th anniversary of the marriage of Patrick Brontë and Maria Branwell. This was at a time when Patrick was minister at Hartshead Church. (John Appleyard)
Agnes Grey is reviewed by Dee's Book Blog and Crónicas en ferrocarrilSwiat Rosemary posts in Polish about The Tenant of Wildfell Hall. Book to the Future writes about Wuthering Heights while Ma Petite Critique Ciné posts briefly in French about the 2011 adaptation. Angela Dissected focuses mainly on the Jane Eyre 2011 costumes.

BrontëBlog Readers to the rescue

A BrontëBlog reader, Sabrina Sepp, is working on her dissertation From literary societies to fan culture and she has written to inquire whether our (other) readers would be so kind as to fill in this form for her.
Your help and time will be much appreciated - thanks in advance for helping a fellow Brontë fan.


Thursday, May 24, 2012

Really chuffed

Yorkshire is still thrilled about  the gold medal awarded Tracy Forster's Brontës' Yorkshire Garden. From The Telegraph and Argus:

Yorkshire’s Brontë Garden has won a gold medal at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show.
The garden, created by tourist agency Welcome to Yorkshire, celebrates the three Brontë sisters born in Thornton who went to live at Haworth parsonage, and the Yorkshire landscape which they found so inspiring.
Gary Verity, chief executive of Welcome to Yorkshire, said: “The garden has had a non-stop stream of admirers since the Chelsea Flower Show opened, but this was the ultimate goal, taking gold back to Yorkshire. This is the third time we’ve entered and we’re delighted to be going home with a gold medal for the first time. We hope to convert thousands of well-wishers into tourists over the course of the week.”
And The Huddersfield Daily Examiner features 'the drystone wallers involved in creating part' of the garden.
Mr Clegg and his son were approached by Tracy Foster many months ago and did their research into the Brontës.
Mr Clegg said: “I walked to Top Withens to get a feel for the place and studied the stones used in the walls up there.
“I managed to get similar stone from a disused Victorian quarry and we shaped it by hand for the garden, creating a folly at the back of a small dell which apparently inspired the sisters.
“We spent six days working at Chelsea and it was brilliant. It was very focussed and very intense, but people were really helpful and friendly, helping out with tools and equipment.
“It was a great atmosphere and when I heard the news we had won gold, it was brilliant and I was really chuffed”. 
The garden can also be seen on InnSight TV.

The Argus-Press features a young writer:
Like many young women, 18-year-old Jane Mandley loves the romantic 19th century novels of Jane Austen and Charlotte Brontë.
What sets Mandley apart is that she has actually penned a romantic 19th century novel of her own: “For the Jane Bennets.” (Sally York)
A Thing Like That! discusses Andrea Arnold's Wuthering HeightsSeçil Seçti writes in Turkish about Cary Fukunaga's Jane Eyre. And finally, Magnolie reviews (in Polish) The Tenant of Wildfell Hall.