Great Women Writers: The Bronte Sisters
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Average customer review:Product Description
This fascinating series presents an informative and entertaining look at some of the greatest women writers of all time. The programs provide an in-depth look into their lives, and include numerous examples of their works while examining their styles which made them unique in the literary world. These original programs also feature many rare archival photographs and period imagery. Emily Brönte was born in England in 1818. Emily’s only close friends were her brother Branwell and her sisters Charlotte and Anne. Emily began writing poems at an early age and published twenty-one of them, together with poems by Anne and Charlotte. The slim volume only sold two copies, and the failure led all three to begin work on novels: Emily on Wuthering Heights, Charlotte on Jane Eyre, and Anne on Agnes Grey. Emily died of tuberculosis at the age of thirty, and never knew the great success of her only novel Wuthering Heights.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #145742 in DVD
- Released on: 2006-05-30
- Rating: NR (Not Rated)
- Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
- Formats: Color, DVD, NTSC
- Original language: English
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 45 minutes
Customer Reviews
More Accurately, Bronte Siblings
Oops! I didn't know there were three Bronte sister authors. I thought there were just two. Further, they had a brother who was mainly a painter. I really wonder if a men's studies scholar could write about what it was like for him to have more celebrated female siblings working in a different field than his own. The work implies that the Bronte's father outlived all his children, yet they don't describe his emotions about that tragedy.
This work, like most works in the series, focuses upon the times in which the books were published, rather than the books themselves. I learned nothing about Heathcliffe and who won the love triangle and all that stuff for which Bronte books are famous. To those with sharp memories, the drawings and modern tapings may get repetitive. However, I am sure the documentary makers were just working with what little they had. At one point, a scene of 1800s Edinburgh was shown, but there's no suggestion that any Bronte sibling visited that town.
The narrator pronounces that last name as if it had an accent aigu on the "e" and thus sounded French. With its umlaut on that vowel, I would have thought the last name would have sounded more German, like Goethe's name. The narrator has terrible French pronunciation. At one point, they show a drawing of a building that says "Desormais" on it. If I remember correctly, that word means "unfortunately" in French, but the narrator says nothing about it.
The Brontes struggled with issues with which many modern artists with sympathize: rejection from publishers, a lack of money, boring daytime jobs, worsening illnesses, etc. Still, this work doesn't present the family as nice people. It stresses how they didn't care for their jobs, didn't like their associates, rejected many a marriage proposal, refused medicines that might have extended their lives. Though the family was creative, this work, at least, portrays them as miserable.
The work never discusses whether the Bronte sisters would have supported gender equality. Unlike works on Austen, it never says whether their work accurately portrayed women or gender issues of the time. These are female writers, but the themes of women's studies and literary criticism never come up.
This documentary did not want to make me read a Bronte book at all. Still, I appreciated learning some about the family and why they are celebrated. I am glad the documentary helped me to obtain this cultural capital.


