
As Emerald Fennell’s film sparks debate, we celebrate the pioneering brilliance of the siblings’ work
This was the first novel that Charlotte Brontë completed. It was rejected by publishers nine times. Written in the voice of a male narrator, William Crimsworth, it offers a downbeat story of everyday middle-class striving as the protagonist travels to Brussels to establish his career as a teacher. But the last publisher to see it thought it showed promise, despite being too short and insufficiently “striking and exciting”. Had the author anything else to offer? Luckily, Jane Eyre – which amply supplied the earlier book’s deficiencies – was already in train and was soon accepted with alacrity. Although The Professor remained unpublished in Charlotte’s lifetime, she continued to believe that it was “as good as I can write”; its subtly ironised male voice reveals her underlying literary sophistication.
Continue reading...United Kingdom
EUROPE
Related News

Inside the ‘Vanity Fair’ Oscar party, where Madonna whispered to Brad Pitt and Courtney Love’s manager was banned
6d ago

‘Sold out’ as a fictional story: How the music industry learned to sell success even when it didn’t exist
1d ago

Philippines, the call‑center capital: Taking a deluge of calls for under $2 an hour
2d ago

By your command, my robot: AI war games spark debate about ethical limits
1d ago

Oil, the crisis crushing Cuba and giving Trump new leverage
2d ago