English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I am in the early stages of reading Jane Eyre. It is very interesting.
Just wondering: How is Jane Austen's Persuasion?
Female authors are great!

2006-08-21 13:57:51 · 11 answers · asked by starrynight107 3 in Arts & Humanities Books & Authors

11 answers

Both Jane Austen and the Bronte sisters are superb novelists, but they represent altogether different styles and approaches to the genre. Austen is a true neo-classical artist, more closely related to the trim precision and sensibility of the 18th century than the romantic period during which she did most of her writing.

On the other hand, the Brontes capture the dark shadows and emotional duress of a true romantic. Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights, even more than Jane Eyre, represents the imaginative daring that came to characterize the romantic fiction. Heathcliff is as much a Byronic hero as any character created by Byron himself or his successors.

Jane Austen captures the subtleties of society and social relationships with humor and understatement. The Brontes capture the anxieties of the inner psyche and intense personal relationships with drama and overstatement.

Austen's works are set primarily in the manor (its parlor, drawing room, and tea table); the Brontes' characters are more at home on the heath. Austen's characters are threatened by forces of incivility; the Brontes' by the forces of insanity.

Now if you want a third series of masterpieces, written by an author who will bring you up to the complexity and ambivalence of the modern mind, go on the to third great female novelist of the nineteenth century, George Eliot (nee Mary Ann Evans). Try Mill on the Floss first; then Adam Bede or Silas Marner, and finally Middlemarch.

2006-08-21 14:25:33 · answer #1 · answered by bfrank 5 · 0 0

The Brontes are brilliant. Each one of them. Emily is my favorite though. Wurthering Heights is awesome. Jane Eyre is good too.

I don't care for Jane Austen myself. I tried to get into her stuff in high school and it didn't do it for me.

Female authors are excellent. They often bring a tenderness to characters that male authors forget, except maybe James Tiptree Jr., Alice wrote like a man.

2006-08-22 09:59:53 · answer #2 · answered by T 4 · 0 0

Next to Pride and Prejudice, Persuasion is my favourite Austen novel.
No Brontes (Anne, Emily, or Charlotte) or Austen book will dissapoint you - they're all fantastic.
I agree that female authors are great - you should also read Elizabeth Stoddard's The Morgesons and anything by George Eliot and Elizabeth Gaskell.

2006-08-21 22:07:03 · answer #3 · answered by msmiligan 4 · 1 0

They are both wonderful. I actually know a lady who wrote Jane Eyre into a musical and it was amazing. I was lucky to be a part of the world premiere and it was a wonderful experience. I love reading Pride and Prejudice as well, I read it at least a couple times a year.

2006-08-21 18:03:19 · answer #4 · answered by Kim D 3 · 0 0

What do you want to know? I've read most of Austen's novels, except for her Juvenalia, and I've read Jane Eyre. Persuasions is good. Read Emma or Mansfield Park, that one is my favorite.

2006-08-21 15:37:53 · answer #5 · answered by Casey M 2 · 0 0

Austen is great, but I like Emma, Sense and Sensibility or P and P better. Check out Wuthering Heights if you haven't already, too. Another Bronte...

2006-08-21 14:03:57 · answer #6 · answered by diasporas 3 · 1 0

haven't read it. but i've read jane eyre. how old are you? i was reading jane eyre when i was 14 and i was haunted by the memory. i dont know, i think made mr. rochester in to a monster and not some debonair. i dont know. all i know is that, i wasn't really in love with the leading man. my mind was too immature that time. :) oh well..


hey, try paulo coelho some time.

2006-08-21 14:16:13 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I have never read any novels by the two authors, but I have read some of their poetry.

I prefer more modern writers, like Dionne Brand, Maya Angelou, bell hooks, etc.

2006-08-21 14:03:59 · answer #8 · answered by Starlight 5 · 0 0

nicely i've got study dissimilar books from Jane Austen, 'Jane Eyre' from Charlotte Bronte, and then 'Tess of the d'Urbervilles' from Thomas Hardy and that i've got enjoyed all of them. 'satisfaction and Prejudice' from Jane Austen is my familiar. although, i comprehend how stressful the language could be to stay with, incredibly while you're no longer discussing it with people - i think of I even have enjoyed those books suitable because of the fact of them being completed in a sort and having to communicate it. the least complicated, i'm uncertain of, yet 'satisfaction and Prejudice' is rather trouble-free to stay with. Or in case you already know the final tale (in case you have considered the flicks or in spite of), then you definately ought to attempt 'satisfaction and Prejudice and Zombies' from Seth Grahame-Smith. this is in basic terms Austen's novel with zombie mayhem further in and this is somewhat humorous in case you already know the unique. i think of this is definitely greater elementary to stay with because of the fact you're continuously waiting for greater zombies. it continues to be in the same form of English yet with zombies. i don't comprehend the type you will possibly discover it in case you haven't any longer study the unique (it somewhat is funnier if the unique is study first -- i concept it became into) yet you ought to attempt and notice the way it is going. countless the older books don't have the action that Seth G-S provides and this isn't any longer lots the language, yet loss of activities that makes them stressful to stay with, so consistent with danger attempt and notice? additionally, Charles Dickens is a robust study (A tale of two cities) - he's one among the classics too, so which you will possibly desire to attempt it out some day. i % to additionally point out that while you're youthful (like teenage) it somewhat is somewhat helpful to attend because of the fact i stumbled on that, besides the certainty that I study those books whilst i became into in extreme college, I had an stronger comprehension as I have been given out of highschool and into college. or you in basic terms might desire to push your self and study slowly. The language is definitely somewhat trouble-free to comprehend, even though it gets stressful whilst no longer something exciting is going on and you zone out. you in basic terms might desire to capture your self and reread the sentence or paragraph which you neglected whil you have been having a pipe dream :)

2016-10-02 09:24:40 · answer #9 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

No, ever since these people became writers no one has ever read anything by them. All the movies,plays and other entertainment is just a figment of your imagination you moron. Why do you people insist on putting such inane questions on this page?

2006-08-21 16:26:18 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers