The novels of the Bronte sisters are among the most enduringly popular of Victorian texts, and provoke complex identifications. Their reputation has fluctuated since the mid nineteenth century, veering between intense fandom and critical distancing, in both cases founded on the perception that the Brontes were labile and cloistered writers, isolated from their times and over-compensatory in their emotional range. Keeping our focus, instead, on the form and content of five canonical Bronte novels, we will think about the relationship between biography and authorship, gender and writing, the relative critical merits of history and theory, and judgments about literary value.
Unit details and rules
| Academic unit | English and Writing |
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| Credit points | 6 |
| Prerequisites
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12 credit points at 2000 level in English |
| Corequisites
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None |
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Prohibitions
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None |
| Assumed knowledge
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None |
| Available to study abroad and exchange students | No |
Teaching staff
| Coordinator | Vanessa Smith, vanessa.smith@sydney.edu.au |
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