The professor
Material type:
- 9781853262081
- F/BRO
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Colombo | F/BRO |
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Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
With an Introduction and Notes by Dr Sally Minogue.
The Professor is Charlotte Brontës first novel, in which she audaciously inhabits the voice and consciousness of a man, William Crimsworth. Like Jane Eyre he is parentless; like Lucy Snowe in Villette he leaves the certainties of England to forge a life in Brussels. But as a man, William has freedom of action, and as a writer Brontë is correspondingly liberated, exploring the relationship between power and sexual desire.
William's first person narration reveals his attraction to the dominating directress of the girls' school where he teaches, played out in the school's 'secret garden'. Balanced against this is his more temperate relationship with one of his pupils, Frances Henri, in which mastery and submission interplay. The Professor was published only after Charlotte Brontës death; today it gives us a fascinating insight into the first stirrings of her supreme creative imagination.
1.99 GBP
Table of contents provided by Syndetics
- Oxford World's Classics (p. ii)
- Abbreviations Used in This Edition (p. vii)
- Introduction (p. ix)
- Note on the Text (p. xxviii)
- Select Bibliography (p. xxxii)
- A Chronology of Charlotte Brontë (p. xxxv)
- Preface (p. 1)
- Chapter I (p. 3)
- Chapter II (p. 12)
- Chapter III (p. 18)
- Chapter IV (p. 25)
- Chapter V (p. 34)
- Chapter VI (p. 41)
- Chapter VII (p. 49)
- Chapter VIII (p. 62)
- Chapter IX (p. 69)
- Chapter X (p. 73)
- Chapter XI (p. 82)
- Chapter XII (p. 88)
- Chapter XIII (p. 102)
- Chapter XIV (p. 108)
- Chapter XV (p. 114)
- Chapter XVI (p. 120)
- Chapter XVII (p. 127)
- Chapter XVIII (p. 135)
- Chapter XIX (p. 147)
- Chapter XX (p. 167)
- Chapter XXI (p. 176)
- Chapter XXII (p. 184)
- Chapter XXIII (p. 198)
- Chapter XXIV (p. 213)
- Appendix (p. 249)
- Appendix (p. 249)
- Explanatory Notes (p. 270)
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Reviews provided by Syndetics
Library Journal Review
This first novel went unpublished during Bront?'s lifetime, rejected by publishers each time it was submitted despite her growing fame for such works as Jane Eyre and Shirley. It was released only after her untimely passing, when there was a great hunger for anything from the pen of this now-famous author, but it was a poor addition to her work. A critic in 1857 wrote that it was "crude, unequal, and unnatural to a fault; it has all the unripe qualities of a bad first work." And indeed it is dreary and confusing, uninvolving and filled with minutiae, and suffers from many awkward and improbable devices, not the least of which is the choice of a male protagonist to tell a tale with many autobiographical aspects. The reading by James Wilby is expert and probably as exciting and dramatic as is possible, given the material. Comprehensive literary collections will want to add this early work of a major author, but more popular collections can safely pass it by.AHarriet Edwards, East Meadow P.L., NY (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.CHOICE Review
This is the first modern edition of a Charlotte Bronte novel that is based on the author's original manuscript. The useful introduction explains the history of this novel's composition and publication. Its appendixes include an unused Bronte preface, a list of editorial variants, and several related manuscripts. Additionally, there is an index to the literary and biblical allusions in all four of Charlotte Bronte's major novels. This important Clarendon edition is essential for all serious collections in Victorian fiction serving graduate students and upper-division undergraduates. -S. A. Parker, Hiram CollegeThere are no comments on this title.
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