This section contains 8,103 words (approx. 28 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: “Incest and Rage in Charlotte Brontë's Novelettes,” in Creating Safe Space: Violence and Women's Writing, edited by Tomoko Kuribayashi and Julie Tharp, State University of New York Press, 1998, pp. 61-77.
In the following essay, Carlson offers a close reading of Brontë's novelettes written between 1836 and 1839 and theorizes that the secret of Angria that Brontë created for her works allowed her to create a safe space and outlet for her forbidden fantasies of father-daughter seduction and female masochism.
Charlotte Brontë, between the ages of thirteen and twenty-three, created a secret fantasy world called Angria, a world that she constructed in hundreds of pages of tiny manuscripts that make up her juvenilia (Alexander, Early Writings 3). Brontë did not write these alone; until 1833 the stories were a joint venture with her two sisters, Anne and Emily, and her brother Branwell (Alexander, Early Writings 62), and the later works, including...
This section contains 8,103 words (approx. 28 pages at 300 words per page) |