Benjamin Poore
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Hunger, rebellion and rage
Adapting Villette
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This chapter begins with a survey of the critical fortunes of Villette: what might be characterised as its struggle to obtain autonomy as a novel, rather than as Charlotte Bronte's thinly disguised autobiography. Bronte's uncontrolled channelling of 'hunger, rebellion and rage' was considered far too instinctive, even for some of her sympathetic critics, to conform to logical, 'masculine' novelistic structural proprieties. The chapter considers the problem of transmedial adaptation for a novel that has such a distinctive vision, and that can be interpreted as, in some ways, always already an adaptation of other texts. It identifies a series of perceived or potential problems in adapting Villette's themes of surveillance and education, along with its characterisation of Lucy Snowe and Paul Emanuel, and its ambiguous ending. The chapter argues that the solutions that radio and theatre adapters have found can force us into a reassessment of Villette's power and distinctiveness.

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Charlotte Brontë

Legacies and afterlives

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