War and culture: the case of the brontës   | thearticle

War and culture: the case of the brontës   | thearticle


Play all audios:


The impact and setting of conflict for British culture is a theme that has attracted greater interest in recent years, and with the work of Jane Austen being profitably interpreted


accordingly. Other authors invite similar coverage. Dickens is not exactly prominent as a writer of empire, but his family was much engaged and his short stories reflect sympathy for


veterans. _The Brontës and War. Fantasy and Conflict in Charlotte and Branwell Brontë’s Youthful Writings__ _(Palgrave, 2019, £59.99, now in its second edition) by Emma Butcher, a Leverhulme


Early Career Fellow in English Literature at the University of Leicester, is a valuable work that reflects well on a tradition of scholarship in which relatively overlooked texts and


approaches are advanced and considered, rather than tired affirmations about discourse. The legacy of war is seen as playing a major role. Thus, Wellington and Napoleon play an important


part in Charlotte’s construction of fictional personalities, as their characteristics and rivalry provide ready-made devices. Butcher demonstrates that the wide-ranging juvenilia of


Charlotte and Branwell provide a way into the variety of commentary on war on offer, and also its role in developing their own sensibilities. She argues that their reading and writing


captures a cultural variety including celebrity culture, periodicals, and the writings of others such as Burns and Scott on former military episodes, including Flodden, Jacobitism and the


Crusades. Branwell was especially interested in Classical warfare, and this provides a valuable guide to the choices he makes and approaches he adopts. Colonial warfare and civil warfare are


also discussed. A valuable work that deserves emulation. A MESSAGE FROM THEARTICLE _We are the only publication that’s committed to covering every angle. We have an important contribution


to make, one that’s needed now more than ever, and we need your help to continue publishing throughout the pandemic. So please, make a donation._