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Friday, July 25, 2008

Author Laura Fish chooses Jean Rhys's Wide Sargasso Sea as her Book of A Lifetime for The Independent:
Wide Sargasso Sea is not just a great novel, it is many brilliant books in one. Multi-layered and complex, Jean Rhys's prelude to Jane Eyre vividly illustrates how accounts and understanding differ, and creates a sense of the characters' past being inescapable.
In this poignant evocation of the bitter romance between the white Creole heiress Antionette Cosway, of the Jamaican plantation-owning class, and the increasingly cold Englishman Mr Rochester, Rhys creates a relationship that is intense with the rage of desire and marked by deep tragedy.
I first read Wide Sargasso Sea before coming to Jane Eyre. When I did read Charlotte Brontë's story, it seemed to me that the first Mrs Rochester, the discarded wife who ghosted about Thornfield Manor, cast a far darker shadow over Mr Rochester and Jane than Brontë had intended.
Set in wild, magical Jamaican scenery, Wide Sargasso Sea depicts the trouble and confusion on West Indian sugar estates in the aftermath of emancipation. Not only is most of the black population as poor as ever, there are poor whites too. Rhys shows that the movement of the West Indians has not been a progression from colonialism to a racial-political independence, but rather from one form of slavery to another. She explores accounts of tensions between written and oral cultures and, through Antionette's narrative, urges the reader towards an understanding and acceptance of the mad woman in the attic. In my own moments of torment, I am often reminded of Antionette's passionate and haunting story. Her psychological disintegration and descent towards madness is a journey which ultimately becomes the mirror opposite to that of the wholesome goodness of the innocent Jane Eyre, as depicted by Brontë.
Wide Sargasso Sea speaks of the history of cruelty and suffering that lies behind some of the West's accumulated wealth, a history which in Jane Eyre is secret and mysterious, and only appears in brief glimpses. This is a book that gives voice to neglected, silenced and unacknowledged stories, exploring different inflections of marginality – gender, class, race and madness. Where historical events, recorded in written discourse, have shaped the opinions of many of the people of the former British colonies and education is exclusively from a Eurocentric perspective, the recovery of "lost" histories has a crucial role to play in allowing access to events and experiences which have not previously been recorded. This idea of "writing back" by breaking down explanations for events and favouring more localised narratives and perspectives has informed my own work, especially in the voices of the former slaves in my latest novel. Wide Sargasso Sea is an inspiration. Certainly, before the phrase was coined, Jean Rhys was a post-colonial writer whose work reminds us that "there is always another side, always".
The Orlando Sentinel has something to say about Wide Sargasso Sea. Specifically about Wide Sargasso Sea 1993:
I'd always meant to read Wide Sargasso Sea, the prequel to Jane Eyre (set mostly in Jamaica), so I settled for the 1993 movie instead. Pity. The actor playing Mr. Rochester is all wrong, and I hate voodoo stuff about as much I hate vampire stuff. (Commander Coconut)
We doubt that Stuart Jeffries from The Guardian's Book Blog could be one of our readers:
To read for pleasure you have got to be in charge of your reading and that means knowing that it's OK to stop reading if it gets boring. Lots of books drop off halfway through. For me, that includes Brideshead Revisited and Wuthering Heights.
Ideal Digital turns to Jane Eyre to illustrate a story about child abuse (in Spanish).

Diary of a Mad Movie Fanatic posts about Jane Eyre 1996. Reading, Writing, Working, Playing continues its series of posts about Elizabeth Gaskell's Life of Charlotte Brontë and Ruthy is all that and a bag of Cheetos links together Shirley and Andrew Peterson's "Come, Lord Jesus".

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