Anne Brontë
-
Standard Name: Brontë, Anne
Birth Name: Anne Brontë
Pseudonym: Acton Bell
Used Form: Anne Bronte
The youngest of the famous Brontë sisters, AB
has had the slightest reputation among the three for her output of poetry and two novels. Recently, however, her fiction's importance and influence has begun to be recognized, particularly for its incisive and detailed portrayal of the oppression of middle-class Victorian women.
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Occupation | Charlotte Brontë | Patrick Brontë
opened a National Church Sunday School
at Haworth, to which Emily
, and Anne
, and CB
contributed by teaching. Barker, Juliet. The Brontës. St Martin’s Press, 1994. 183 |
Occupation | Sydney Thompson Dobell | While best remembered for writing spasmodic poetry, STD
also worked as a reviewer. In the Palladium and the Athenæum he gave positive reviews to works by Anne
, Emily
, and Charlotte Brontë
. Mitchell, Sally, editor. Victorian Britain: An Encyclopedia. Garland Press, 1988. 745 |
Performance of text | Elizabeth Goudge | The first of EG
's plays to be professionally staged, TheBrontësofHaworth, opened at the Charta Theatre
in London. “Elizabeth Goudge Books”. Anglophile Books: British women authors. |
Performance of text | Clemence Dane | CD
's Wild Decembers, based on the lives of the BrontëEmily BrontëAnne BrontëBranwell Brontë
family, had its first performance, at the Apollo Theatre
, London. Weintraub, Stanley, editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 10. Gale Research, 1982. 10: 133 Demastes, William W., and Katherine E. Kelly, editors. British Playwrights, 1880-1956. Greenwood Press, 1996. 100 |
Author summary | Phyllis Bentley | Phyllis Bentley
was a prolific and successful novelist, literary critic, short-story writer, children's writer, and journalist, who was productive over a broad span of the twentieth century. Almost all her twenty-eight novels and numerous short... |
Publishing | Emily Brontë | Anne
and EB
arranged with Thomas Newby
to publish Agnes Grey and Wuthering Heights; they had to pay him £50 towards costs. Barker, Juliet. The Brontës. St Martin’s Press, 1994. 525 |
Publishing | Muriel Spark | Spark's first Brontë project was a group biography of the whole family, including the parents. In June 1949 she felt like a pregnant tigress with this work. It was to be published by Lindsay Drummond |
Reception | Jean Plaidy | In 1991, JP
said of Mistress of Mellyn: This was the sort of book that I loved to write, because I had read so much of the BrontësCharlotte BrontëAnne Brontë
, over and over again, and... |
Reception | Charlotte Maria Tucker | CMT
, whose works sold very well, was regarded as a major female author during the mid-Victorian period. She was incensed when in 1882 some one wrote a sketch of her life, and requested her... |
Reception | Charlotte Brontë | |
Residence | Anne Lister | |
Textual Features | Liz Lochhead | Beginning with a rap'bout being a woman, Lochhead, Liz. True Confessions and New Clichés. Polygon Books, 1985. 3 |
Textual Features | George Eliot | This story is equally remarkable for the portraits of Mr Tryan (the Evangelical clergyman who not only converts Janet to his beliefs but succeeds in sparking her will to regeneration) and of Janet herself, but... |
Textual Features | Eudora Welty | The word regional, said Welty, is careless, condescending, and an outsider's term; it has no meaning for the insider who is doing the writing.Jane Austen
, theBrontësisters
, and the writers... |
Textual Features | Anthony Trollope | This novel is remarkable for its explicit depiction of wife abuse in a middle-class marriage. This was a difficult topic for Victorian fiction to tackle, and had seldom been touched since Anne Brontë
's The... |
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Texts
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