Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Evangelicalism" ¶ 26
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Charlotte and Bronte's
* Charlotte Bronte's account of a visit to the Great Exhibition mytimemachine. co. uk
Stiles are mentioned a great deal in Charlotte Bronte's novel Jane Eyre.
Helen Burns, a character from Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre, is alleged to have been based on the author's dyspraxic elder sister Maria Bronte.
* Wide Sargasso Sea ( 1966 ) by Jean Rhys: A textual intervention on Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre, the story of the " mad women in the attic " told from her perspective.
': Negotiating British Identity in Charlotte Bronte's the Professor and Villette.
( Charlotte Bronte's Novel ).
In Charlotte Bronte's Villette it is used in the quarrel between Mme Beck and Lucy over Paul Emmanuel ( Chapter 38 ).

Charlotte and novel
Charlotte believed that art was most convincing when based on personal experience ; in Jane Eyre she transformed this experience into a novel with universal appeal.
Following the success of Jane Eyre, in 1848 Charlotte began work on the manuscript of her second novel, Shirley.
The fragment of a new novel she had been working on in her last years has been twice completed by recent authors, the more famous version being Emma Brown: A Novel from the Unfinished Manuscript by Charlotte Brontë by Clare Boylan in 2003.
In 1850, Charlotte edited and published Wuthering Heights as a stand-alone novel and under Emily's real name.
Smuggling is a common trope or theme in literature and can be found in a wide range of works – from the 18th century novels of Charlotte Turner Smith to Prosper Mérimée's 19th century novella, Carmen ( the inspiration for numerous films as well as Bizet's opera, Carmen ) to the James Bond novel ( and later film ) Diamonds are Forever.
Charlotte Bronte wrote her second novel, Jane Eyre, in 1847
A more recent fictional example is Charlotte Gray, based on the novel by Sebastian Faulks.
* Charlotte Brontë's novel Shirley ( 1849 ), set during the Napoleonic Wars, explores some of the economic effects of war on rural Yorkshire.
It was not printed until December 1847 under the pseudonym Ellis Bell, after the success of her sister Charlotte Brontë's novel Jane Eyre.
Critically, it is considered a Bildungsroman – i. e., a novel of self-cultivation – and would be included in the same genre as Dickens's own Great Expectations ( 1861 ), Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre, Thomas Hardy's Jude the Obscure, Samuel Butler's The Way of All Flesh, H. G. Wells's Tono-Bungay, D. H. Lawrence's Sons and Lovers, and James Joyce's A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.
Charlotte Bronte referred to the novel in a letter to William Smith Williams on 13 September 1849, noting that " I have read David Copperfield ; it seems to me very good — admirable in some parts.
* Shirley ( novel ), an 1849 novel by Charlotte Brontë
In 1996, Gainsbourg starred as the title character in Jane Eyre, a film adaption of Charlotte Brontë's 1847 novel.
Kovalevskaya wrote several non-mathematical works as well, including a memoir, A Russian Childhood, plays ( in collaboration with Duchess Anne Charlotte Edgren-Leffler ) and a partly autobiographical novel, Nihilist Girl ( 1890 ).
Lucy Honeychurch is touring Italy with her overbearing older cousin and chaperone, Charlotte Bartlett, and the novel opens with their complaints about the hotel, " The Pension Bertolini.
Lucy realizes that the novel is by Miss Lavish ( the writer-acquaintance from Florence ) and that Charlotte must thus have told her about the kiss.
The riots provided Charlotte Brontë with material for her novel Shirley.
Charlotte Brontë immortalised the family and the house in her novel Shirley.
* The brig Seahawk in Avi's novel The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle.
Susanna Rowson is best known for her novel, Charlotte: A Tale of Truth, published in London in 1791.
In 1794 the novel was reissued in Philadelphia under the title, Charlotte Temple.
Although Rowson was extremely popular in her time and is often acknowledged in accounts of the development of the early American novel, Charlotte Temple is often criticized as a sentimental novel of seduction.

Charlotte and Jane
Mainly because the re-publication of The Tenant of Wildfell Hall was prevented by Charlotte Brontë after Anne's death, she is less known than her sisters Charlotte, author of four novels including Jane Eyre, and Emily, author of Wuthering Heights.
Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre is yet another example of fictional autobiography, as noted on the front page of the original version.
Charlotte later used the school as the basis for Lowood School in Jane Eyre.
Charlotte responded by finishing and sending a second manuscript in August 1847, and six weeks later Jane Eyre: An Autobiography, was published.
In view of the success of her novels, particularly Jane Eyre, Charlotte was persuaded by her publisher to visit London occasionally, where she revealed her true identity and began to move in a more exalted social circle, becoming friends with Harriet Martineau and Elizabeth Gaskell, and acquainted with William Makepeace Thackeray and G. H. Lewes.
* Charlotte's Web: A Hypertext on Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre
After the death of their mother in 1821, when Emily was three years old, the older sisters Maria, Elizabeth and Charlotte were sent to the Clergy Daughters ' School at Cowan Bridge, where they encountered abuse and privations later described by Charlotte in Jane Eyre.
Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights ( 1847 ) transports the Gothic to the forbidding Yorkshire Moors and features ghostly apparitions and a Byronic hero in the person of the demonic Heathcliff while Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre ( 1847 ) adds The Madwoman in the Attic ( Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar 1979 ) to the cast of Gothic fiction.
Many modern writers of horror ( or indeed other types of fiction ) exhibit considerable Gothic sensibilities — examples include the works of Anne Rice, as well as some of the sensationalist works of Stephen King The Romantic strand of Gothic was taken up in Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca ( 1938 ) which is in many respects a reworking of Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre.
* " A Chapter in the History of a Tyrone Family " ( 1839 ), which may have influenced Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre.
* October – Charlotte Brontë publishes Jane Eyre under the pen name of Currer Bell.
Charlotte Brontë published Shirley and Jane Eyre under the name Currer Bell.
His 1996 adaptation of Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre was a critical success.
* ( 1847 ) In Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë, an outbreak of typhus occurs in Jane's school Lowood, highlighting the unsanitary conditions the girls live in.
Although Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre was generally considered the best of the Brontë sisters ' works during most of the nineteenth century, many subsequent critics of Wuthering Heights argued that it was a superior achievement.
Charles Thomson's painting, Sir Nicholas Serota Makes an Acquisitions Decision, as Charlotte Cripps of The Independent wrote is one of the best known paintings to come out of the Stuckist movement, and as Jane Morris wrote in The Guardian it's a likely " signature piece " for the movement, standing for its opposition to conceptual art.

0.379 seconds.