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All British Literature Videos 53 videos
Well, if this book doesn't make you want to tape over your laptop camera, we don't know what will.
Imagine a world in which all literature was dystopian. Okay, so we may be getting to that point, 1984 and V for Vendetta helped start it all.
By the end of this video, you will be brainwashed. There's nothing you can do about it; we just wanted to let you know. We like to think we're bigg...
ELA 12: 6.7 Judging a Book by Its First Line 803 Views
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Description:
The Brontë sisters and their strong female characters paved the way for future generations of writers.
Transcript
- 00:00
being a woman in the literary world has never been easy. literature has
- 00:07
long been a field dominated by men. for a while it was easier for women just to [woman frowns in a library]
- 00:11
pretend to be men if they wanted to get published. luckily this meant taking on a
- 00:15
pseudonym, other than donning a fake mustache . but this was the course of
- 00:20
action taken by charlotte brontë author of Jane Eyre and universally
Full Transcript
- 00:24
acknowledged woman. Charlotte and her sisters Emily and Anne were authors in
- 00:29
their own right but living as they did in the 19th century they were in a
- 00:32
tricky place as female writers. that's true at least women could get published
- 00:38
hadn't always been the case however books by women tended to be seen as [novels by 19th century women pictured]
- 00:42
Chiclets, you know dealing with gossip romance and domestic life. in other words
- 00:47
the frivolous concerns of frivolous women. well their works weren't taken
- 00:51
seriously by the literary establishment whose members were more concerned with
- 00:55
stuff like philosophy or adventure or you know man stuff. well aware of the
- 01:00
literary climate each of the sisters adopted pseudonyms Charlotte published [men write with serious faces]
- 01:04
as Gurrer, Emily as Ellis, and Anne as Acton. well fortunately book signings
- 01:11
weren't common at the time so they didn't have to worry about being found
- 01:14
out by their legions of adoring fans. well the Bronte's weren't just
- 01:18
interested in getting their work published. they were also interested in
- 01:21
writing about heroines who escaped the dominant 19th century expectations for
- 01:26
women. in Jane Eyre Charlotte focuses on the life of Jane who starts the book is
- 01:32
an abused child living with rich relatives to be a lot less depressing if [child wears fancy ball gown with bandage on head]
- 01:36
she were happy and free and had two keys to a chocolate factory, but Charlotte
- 01:40
wasn't interested in writing to that kind of story.
- 01:42
we can get a taste of how Jane bucked tradition in a scene right before she's
- 01:47
about to be shipped off to boarding school . rather than accepting her lot
- 01:51
with traditional feminine and docility a good 19th century girl Jane lets her
- 01:56
aunt have it telling her exactly how she feels about her. Spoiler alert, Jane's not
- 02:01
exactly a huge fan of her cruel aunt. while this act gives Jane a feeling of
- 02:06
freedom and triumph, a feeling that Bronte thinks women ought to pursue, and
- 02:10
luckily for women everywhere there are plenty of ways to feel freedom
- 02:13
and triumph without yelling at family members. [woman kick boxes]
- 02:15
although few others make you feel so good.
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