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Charlotte Bronte and Defensive Conduct - The Author and the Body at Risk (Hardcover)
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Charlotte Bronte and Defensive Conduct - The Author and the Body at Risk (Hardcover)
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Selected by Choice magazine as an Outstanding Academic TitleIn both
her life and her art, Charlotte Bronte was alive to the difficulty
of responding to attacks that are denied or underacknowledged, so
that any defense risks seeming defensive in our modern sense of the
word: too quick to take offense or covertly aggressive. For some,
Bronte's novels are deformed by hunger, rebellion, and rage; for
others, they are deformed by the repression of these feelings. Both
views ignore hunger, rebellion, and rage as powerful resources for
Bronte's art rather than as personal difficulties to be surmounted
or even deplored.Janet Gezari reassesses Charlotte Bronte's
achievement by showing the ways in which an embodied defensiveness
is central to both the novels and their author's life. She argues
that Bronte's novels explore the complex relations between
accommodation and resistance in the lives of those who find
themselves--largely for reasons of class and gender--on the
defensive. Gezari rehabilitates the concept of defensiveness by
suggesting that there are circumstances in which defensive conduct
is both appropriate and creditable. The emphasis on a different
kind of bodily experience in each novel identifies Bronte's
specific social concerns in the text; and the kinds of
self-defenses at issue in it.This book arrives in the wake of
renewed critical interest in Charlotte Bronte, especially on the
part of feminist critics. They have substantially revised our
understanding of Jane Eyre and Villette, but there have been few
studies of The Professor and Shirley, and few book-length studies
of Charlotte Bronte's work as a whole. Although Gezari's book is
not a biography, she also seeks to revise our sense of Bronte's
life by turning attention from its familiar romantic
circumstances--the bleakness of the Yorkshire moors and unrequited
love--to its less familiar practical circumstances--her struggles
as a woman of a certain class and a publishing author. They reveal
a woman more embattled, contentious, and resilient, though no less
passionate, than the more familiar trembling soul.
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