EN7128 the Brontës | Readinglists@Leicester

EN7128 the Brontës | Readinglists@Leicester

10/02/21 EN7128 The Brontës | readinglists@leicester EN7128 The Brontës View Online [1] Alexander, C. and Sellars, J. 1995. The art of the Brontës. Cambridge University Press. [2] Alexander, C. and Smith, M. 2003. Oxford companion to the Brontes. Oxford University Press. [3] Allott, M. 1974. The Brontës, the critical heritage. Routledge and Kegan Paul. [4] Barker, J.R.V. 1995. The Brontës. Phoenix. [5] Beaty, J. 1996. Misreading Jane Eyre: a postformalist paradigm. Ohio State University Press. [6] Berry, E.H. 1994. Anne Brontë’s radical vision: structures of consciousness. University of Victoria. 1/10 10/02/21 EN7128 The Brontës | readinglists@leicester [7] Bock, C. 1992. Charlotte Brontë and the storyteller’s audience. University of Iowa Press. [8] Brennan, Z. 2010. Brontë’s Jane Eyre: a reader's guide. Continuum. [9] Brontë, A. 1994. Agnes Grey. Wordsworth Editions. [10] Brontë, A. 1996. The tenant of Wildfell Hall. Wordsworth Classics. [11] Brontë, C. 1992. Jane Eyre. Wordsworth Editions. [12] Brontë, C. 1993. Shirley. Wordsworth Classics. [13] Brontë, C. et al. 2008. The professor. Oxford University Press. [14] Brontë, C. 1993. Villette. Wordsworth Editions. [15] Brontë, C. and Alexander, C. 1986. An edition of the early writings of Charlotte Bronte: 2/10 10/02/21 EN7128 The Brontës | readinglists@leicester 1826-1832, Vol.1: The Glass Town saga. Published for the Shakespeare Head Press by Basil Blackwell. [16] Brontë, C. and Alexander, C. 1991. An edition of the early writings of Charlotte Brontë: Vol.2: The rise of Angria, 1833-1835. published for the Shakespeare Head Press by Basil Blackwell. [17] Brontë, C. and Barker, J.R.V. 1996. Juvenilia, 1829-1835. Penguin. [18] Brontë, C. and Newman, B. 1996. Jane Eyre. St. Martin’s Press, Macmillan. [19] Brontë, C. and Smith, M. 1995. The letters of Charlotte Brontë: with a selection of letters by family and friends, Vol.1: 1829-1847. Clarendon Press. [20] Brontë, C. and Smith, M. 2000. The letters of Charlotte Brontë: with a selection of letters by family and friends, Vol.2: 1848-1851. Oxford University Press. [21] Brontë, C. and Smith, M. 2004. The letters of Charlotte Brontë: with a selection of letters by family and friends, Vol.3: 1852-1855. Oxford University Press. [22] Brontë, E. 1992. Wuthering heights. Wordsworth Editions. 3/10 10/02/21 EN7128 The Brontës | readinglists@leicester [23] Brontë, E. and Gezari, J. 1992. The Complete poems. Penguin Books. [24] Brontë, E. and Stoneman, P. 1995. Wuthering Heights. Oxford University Press. [25] Chitham, E. 1998. The birth of Wuthering heights: Emily Brontë at work. Macmillan. [26] Eagleton, T. 1975. Myths of power: a Marxist study of the Brontës. Macmillan. [27] Emily W. Heady 2006. ‘Must I Render an Account?’: Genre and Self-Narration in Charlotte Brontë’s ‘Villette’. Journal of Narrative Theory. 36, 3 (2006). [28] Gaskell, E.C. and Easson, A. 2009. The life of Charlotte Brontë. Oxford University Press. [29] Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak 1985. Three Women’s Texts and a Critique of Imperialism. Critical Inquiry. 12, 1 (1985). [30] Gezari, J. 1992. Charlotte Bront�e and defensive conduct: the author and the body at risk. University of Pennsylvania Press. [31] 4/10 10/02/21 EN7128 The Brontës | readinglists@leicester Gezari, J. 2007. Last things: Emily Bronte’s poems. Oxford University Press. [32] Gilbert, S.M. and Gubar, S. 2000. The madwoman in the attic: the woman writer and the nineteenth-century literary imagination. Yale University Press. [33] Glen, H. 2002. Charlotte Brontë: the imagination in history. Oxford University Press. [34] Glen, H. 1997. Jane Eyre. Macmillan. [35] Glen, H. 2002. The Cambridge companion to the Brontës. Cambridge University Press. [36] Gordon, L. 1995. Charlotte Brontë: a passionate life. Vintage. [37] Ingham, P. 2008. The Brontës. Oxford University Press. [38] Jay, B. and British Council 2000. Anne Brontë. Northcote House in association with the British Council. [39] Joyce Zonana 1993. The Sultan and the Slave: Feminist Orientalism and the Structure of ‘Jane Eyre’. Signs. 18, 3 (1993). 5/10 10/02/21 EN7128 The Brontës | readinglists@leicester [40] Kendrick, R. 2006. Edward Rochester and the Margins of Masculinity in Jane Eyre and Wide Sargasso Seantës. The Brontës. Oxford University Press. [41] Knight, M. and Mason, E. 2006. Nineteenth-century religion and literature: an introduction. Oxford University Press. [42] Kucich, J. 1987. Repression in Victorian fiction: Charlotte Brontë, George Eliot, and Charles Dickens. University of California Press. [43] Lamonica, D. 2003. ‘We are three sisters’: self and family in the writing of the Brontës. University of Missouri Press. [44] Lane, C. 2002. Charlotte Bronte on the Pleasure of Hating. ELH. 69, 1 (2002), 199–222. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1353/elh.2002.0008. [45] Langland, E. 1989. Anne Brontë: the other one. Macmillan. [46] Marcus, S. 2007. Between women: friendship, desire, and marriage in Victorian England. Princeton University Press. [47] 6/10 10/02/21 EN7128 The Brontës | readinglists@leicester Mason, E. 2003. ”Some God of Wild Enthusiast’s Dreams”: Emily Brontë’s Religious Enthusiasm. 31, 1 (2003). [48] Massé, M.A. 1992. In the name of love: women, masochism, and the Gothic. Cornell University Press. [49] Maynard, J. 1984. Charlotte Brontë and sexuality. Cambridge University Press. [50] McKee, P. 2009. Racial Strategies in Jane Eyre’. 37, (2009). [51] McLaughlin, R.A. ‘I Prefer a Master’: Female Power in Charlotte Bronte’s Shirley. 29, 3. [52] Meyer, S. 1996. Imperialism at home: race and Victorian women’s fiction. Cornell University Press. [53] Miller, J.H. 1963. The disappearance of God: five nineteenth-century writers. Harvard University Press. [54] Miller, L. 2002. The Brontë myth. Vintage. [55] 7/10 10/02/21 EN7128 The Brontës | readinglists@leicester Nash, J. and Suess, B.A. 2001. New approaches to the literary art of Anne Brontë. Ashgate. [56] Nestor, P. 1985. Female friendships and communities: Charlotte Brontë, George Eliot, Elizabeth Gaskell. Clarendon Press. [57] Norris, P. and Brontë family 1997. The Brontës : selected poems. Everyman. [58] Peschier, D. 2005. Nineteenth-century anti-Catholic discourses: the case of Charlotte Brontë. Palgrave Macmillan. [59] Peters, J.G. ”We Stood at God’s Feet Equal”: Equality, Subversion, and Religion in Jane Eyre. 29, 1. [60] Poovey, M. 1988. Uneven developments: the ideological work of gender in mid-Victorian England. University of Chicago Press. [61] Pykett, L. 1989. Emily Brontë. Macmillan. [62] Qualls, B.V. 1982. The secular pilgrims of Victorian fiction: the novel as book of life. Cambridge University Press. 8/10 10/02/21 EN7128 The Brontës | readinglists@leicester [63] Ratchford, F.E. 1964. The Brontës’ web of childhood. Russell and Russell. [64] Rogal, S.J. 1981. The Methodist Connection in Charlotte Brontë’s Shirley. Victorians Institute Journal. 10, (Feb. 1981), 1–13. [65] Sedgwick, E.K. 1986. The coherence of Gothic conventions. Methuen. [66] Showalter, E. 1982. A literature of their own: British women novelists from Brontë to Lessing. Virago Press. [67] Shuttleworth, S. 1996. Charlotte Bronte and Victorian psychology. Cambridge University Press. [68] Stoneman, P. 1996. Brontë transformations: the cultural dissemination of Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights. Prentice Hall/Harvester Wheatsheaf. [69] Stoneman, P. 2007. Jane Eyre on stage, 1848-1898: an illustrated edition of eight plays with contextual notes. Ashgate. [70] Susan L. Meyer 1990. Colonialism and the Figurative Strategy of ‘Jane Eyre’. Victorian Studies. 33, 2 (1990). 9/10 10/02/21 EN7128 The Brontës | readinglists@leicester [71] Thomas, S. 2008. Imperialism, reform, and the making of Englishness in Jane Eyre. Palgrave Macmillan. [72] Thormählen, M. 2010. The Brontës and education. Cambridge University Press. [73] Thormählen, M. 2004. The Brontës and religion. Cambridge University Press. [74] Torgerson, B.E. 2005. Reading the Brontë body: disease, desire, and the constraints of culture. Palgrave Macmillan. [75] Wilkes, J. 2010. Women reviewing women in nineteenth-century Britain: the critical reception of Jane Austen, Charlotte Brontë, and George Eliot. Ashgate. [76] Wylie, J. 1999. Incarnate Crimes: Masculine Gendering and the Double in Jane Eyre. Victorians Institute Journal. 27, (1999). 10/10.

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