The Brontës and the Fairy Tale
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Ohio University Press
Published:12th Nov '24
£66.00
Supplier delay - available to order, but may take longer than usual.
An appealing book for Victorianists, British literature specialists, general readers, and anyone with an interest in fairy tales and folklore.
This is the first comprehensive study devoted to the role of fairy tales and folklore in the work of the Brontë family of writers: Charlotte, Emily, Anne, and Branwell. It engages with and extends the contemporary critical discourse on genre, literary realism, the history of the fairy tale, national identity, and the position of women in the Victorian period.
The Brontës and the Fairy Tale is the first comprehensive study devoted to the role of fairy tales and folklore in the work of Charlotte, Emily, Anne, and Branwell Brontë. It intervenes in debates on genre, literary realism, the history of the fairy tale, and the position of women in the Victorian period. Building on recent scholarship emphasizing the dynamic relationship between the fairy tale and other genres in the nineteenth century, the book resituates the Brontës’ engagement with fairy tales in the context of twenty-first-century assumptions that the stories primarily evoke childhood and happy endings. Jessica Campbell argues instead that fairy tales and folklore function across the Brontës’ works as plot and character models, commentaries on gender, and signifiers of national identity.
Scholars have long characterized the fairy tale as a form with tremendous power to influence cultures and individuals. The late twentieth century saw important critical work revealing the sinister aspects of that power, particularly its negative effects on female readers. But such an approach can inadvertently reduce the history of the fairy tale to a linear development from the “traditional” tale (pure, straight, patriarchal, and didactic) to the “postmodern” tale (playful, sophisticated, feminist, and radical). Campbell joins other contemporary scholars in arguing that the fairy tale has always been a remarkably elastic form, allowing writers and storytellers of all types to reshape it according to their purposes.
The Brontës are most famous today for Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights, haunting novels that clearly repurpose fairy tales and folklore. Campbell’s book, however, reveals similar repurposing throughout the entire Brontë oeuvre. The Brontës and the Fairy Tale is recursive: in demonstrating the ubiquity and multiplicity of uses of fairy tales in the works of the Brontës, Campbell enhances not only our understanding of the Brontës’ works but also the status of fairy tales in the Victorian period.
Ever since Vladimir Nabokov told us that all great novels are fairy tales, we have started taking seriously the connection between oral storytelling cultures and imaginative print literature. Jessica Campbell brilliantly reveals how the Brontës mined rich veins of lore, local and global, in ways that have gone undetected in previous scholarly works. Whether engaged in disruptive moves that upended the plots and structures of fairy tales or in unconscious appropriations of tropes and themes, the Brontës renewed the energy of wisdom from times past while crafting their own story worlds. -- Maria Tatar, author of The Hard Facts of the Grimms’ Fairy Tales and editor of The Classic Fairy Tales
Thorough, learned, and engaging, The Brontës and the Fairy Tale unites new developments in Victorian studies and fairy-tale studies to rejuvenate our understanding of the family’s engagement with this narrative form. Brontë scholars in particular will rejoice at the extensive treatment of Anne and Branwell and the thorough and illuminating examination of the juvenilia. -- Shawna Ross, author of Charlotte Brontë at the Anthropocene
It was a huge pleasure to read The Brontës and the Fairy Tale. Jessica Campbell shows herself to be scholarly, intellectually curious, and incisive about the works she discusses. She’s written a thoughtful and engaging critical book, a very useful and welcome contribution to scholarship. -- Michael Newton, Leiden University, editor of Victorian Fairy Tales
ISBN: 9780821425640
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
272 pages