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The Brontë Novels as Historical Fiction

Author

Summary, in English

The article looks at the Brontës' reasons for setting the action of their novels in the past, from the late-18th-century setting of "Wuthering Heights" to the twenty-year backdating of "Agnes Grey". The bulk of the article, however, deals with Charlotte Brontë's condition-of-England novel "Shirley".



Like other well-known nineteenth-century novelists, including Dickens and Thackeray, the Brontë sisters wrote fiction set in the past. Indeed, the main action in all their novels is backdated by at least one generation. This article explores reasons for the three writers’ respective choices of temporal framework, looking at works by all of them in the historical contexts to which they supposedly belong. The bulk of the analysis is devoted to the only Brontë book that may be called a condition-of-England novel, Charlotte Brontë’s Shirley. The paper addresses the stereoscopic properties of the action in that novel, Luddism prefiguring Chartism. Showing how past and present coalesce in the book’s portrayal of Yorkshire and Britain, this paper supplies an outline of what, to Charlotte Brontë, made Britain great.

Department/s

Publishing year

2015

Language

English

Pages

276-282

Publication/Series

Brontë Studies

Volume

40

Issue

4

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

The Brontë Society

Topic

  • Specific Literatures

Keywords

  • Brontë
  • historical novel
  • Jane Eyre
  • politics in literature
  • Shirley

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1474-8932