Louisa Yates
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‘Reader, I [shagged/ beat/ whipped/ f****d/ rewrote] him’
The sexual and financial afterlives of Jane Eyre
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This chapter discusses the afterlives of Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre or Jane Eyre, and talks about the motivations and rewards in reimagining the Victorian. Jane Eyre links the Victorian literary canon with the sexual and financial politics of the sexually explicit 'erotic makeover' novels published in the immediate aftermath of Fifty Shades of Grey. The chapter concerns differing discourses of appropriation that substantiate the revisionist principles of both neo-Victorian novels and erotic makeovers. These discourses emerge from the texts themselves, from marketing material and reviews in both online and print media, and from within the academy. The chapter identifies shared financial imperatives and legitimating discourses that are proffered as an explanation for both genres' existence. It focuses on two case studies, the first a 'non-literary' erotic makeover from publisher Clandestine Classics and the second a neo-Victorian novel, Charlotte by D. M. Thomas.

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Charlotte Brontë

Legacies and afterlives

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