Byronic Heroes in Nineteenth-Century Women’s Writing and Screen Adaptation charts a new chapter in the changing fortunes of a unique cultural phenomenon. This book examines the afterlives of the Byronic hero through the work of nineteenth-century women writers and screen adaptations of their fiction. It is a timely reassessment of Byron’s enduring legacy during the nineteenth century and beyond, focusing on the charged and unstable literary dialogues between Jane Austen, Elizabeth Gaskell, George Eliot and a Romantic icon whose presence takes centre stage in recent screen adaptations of their most celebrated novels. The broad interdisciplinary lens employed in this book concentrates on the conflicted rewritings of Byron’s poetry, his ‘heroic’ protagonists, and the cult of Byronism in nineteenth-century novels from Pride and Prejudice to Middlemarch, and extends outwards to the reappearance of Byronic heroes on film and in television series over the last two decades.
Mục lục
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Jane Austen’s Byronic Heroes I: Northanger Abbey and Sense and Sensibility
2. Jane Austen’s Byronic Heroes II: Persuasion and Pride and Prejudice
3. Elizabeth Gaskell’s Byronic Heroes: Wives and Daughters and North and South
4. George Eliot’s Byronic Heroes I: Early Works and Poetry
5. George Eliot’s Byronic Heroes II: Later Works
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Giới thiệu về tác giả
Sarah Wootton is Senior Lecturer in the Department of English Studies at Durham University, UK. She has published widely on nineteenth-century literature and the visual arts, with a particular focus on the afterlives of Romantic poets and Victorian women writers. She is the author of Consuming Keats: Nineteenth-Century Representations in Art and Literature (2006).