ENGL 330(F) The Brontes: The Making of Myths

This course will explore the evolving mythic power and enduring imaginative force of the art the Brontes created. Readings will begin with the famous fantasy kingdoms the Bronte children-Charlotte, Emily, Branwell, and Anne-produced while living in an isolated parsonage on the Yorkshire moors in mid-nineteenth-century England. We will then turn to three novels by Charlotte (Jane Eyre, Villette, and Shirley), Emily's poetry and her novel, Wuthering Heights, and selected writings by Anne and Branwell. In addition, each student will read and report on one of the many competing biographies of the Brontes. Subjects for discussion will include the Brontes' own myth-making; the aesthetic transformation of their childhood experiences into fiction and poetry; and the myths generated by contending nineteenth- and twentieth-century biographical and critical accounts of the Brontes. Requirements: active participation, two panel presentations, one short paper, and a 15-page term paper. Prerequisite: a 100-level English course, except 150. Major Seminar. Enrollment limited to 15 (expected: 15). Preference to English majors and concentrators in Women's and Gender Studies. (1700-1900)

Hour: S. GRAVER