Podcasts

  • With... Adam Sargant - It's our last episode of series 1!!! Expect ghost, ghouls and lots of laughs as we round off the series with Adam Sargant, AKA Haunted Haworth. We'll be...
    1 week ago

Friday, October 09, 2009

Friday, October 09, 2009 12:04 am by M. in , ,    1 comment
We present today another book with Brontë interest:
Screening Novel Women
From British Domestic Fiction to Film

Liora Brosh
Palgrave Macmillan
ISBN: 9780230008465
2008

From Hollywood classics like Jane Eyre or Wuthering Heights to the 1990s wave of Jane Austen films, adaptations of the British nineteenth-century novel have been sensationally popular. Screening Novel Women offers a sophisticated analysis of how the cinema has captivated audiences by refashioning nineteenth-century novels in terms of twentieth-century anxieties about women. British domestic novels explore the tension between the rich and varied desires of women and a culture that idealized their role in the home. During the Depression, World War II and the 1990s, when gender roles changed rapidly, British and American filmmakers used the domestic novels of the past to construct stable gender ideals for the present. Screening Novel Women reveals how these film adaptations, like their literary sources, offer complex and often contradictory responses to their culture's changing ideas about women, marriage and the home.
The book contains the chapters:
PART ONE: THE 1930s AND 1940s: HOLLYWOOD AND BRITAIN
Consuming Women: Pride and Prejudice and Wuthering Heights
Maternal Desire: Jane Eyre
Categories: , ,

1 comment:

  1. This sounds like a very interesting book for anybody fascinated by adaptations of literary classics - just a shame it is so expensive. Thanks very much for posting about it. Judy

    ReplyDelete