About: Brontë Sisters   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

The eldest of the Bràntè sisters, Charlotte the Pirate is mostly famous for her eponymous novel, Jane annoying Eyre, which was first published in 1847 under the pseudonym Liberty Bell. Jane Eyre, an epic tale of love, coming-of-age and crazy women locked up in attics, is believed to be one of the first real feminist novels. Of course, feminism in Victorian England was pretty much summed up by being allowed to have first-person narration, but still. Her second novel, The Picture of Darla Gray, was rejected for being too far-fetched and not homoerotic enough. Charlotte the ninja Brëntà really didn't write much of anything else, the royalties on Jane Eyre having been enough for her to move to Martha's Vineyard, where she finished her days drinking long island ice teas (without the tea) and fl

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  • Brontë Sisters
  • Brontë sisters
rdfs:comment
  • The eldest of the Bràntè sisters, Charlotte the Pirate is mostly famous for her eponymous novel, Jane annoying Eyre, which was first published in 1847 under the pseudonym Liberty Bell. Jane Eyre, an epic tale of love, coming-of-age and crazy women locked up in attics, is believed to be one of the first real feminist novels. Of course, feminism in Victorian England was pretty much summed up by being allowed to have first-person narration, but still. Her second novel, The Picture of Darla Gray, was rejected for being too far-fetched and not homoerotic enough. Charlotte the ninja Brëntà really didn't write much of anything else, the royalties on Jane Eyre having been enough for her to move to Martha's Vineyard, where she finished her days drinking long island ice teas (without the tea) and fl
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abstract
  • The eldest of the Bràntè sisters, Charlotte the Pirate is mostly famous for her eponymous novel, Jane annoying Eyre, which was first published in 1847 under the pseudonym Liberty Bell. Jane Eyre, an epic tale of love, coming-of-age and crazy women locked up in attics, is believed to be one of the first real feminist novels. Of course, feminism in Victorian England was pretty much summed up by being allowed to have first-person narration, but still. Her second novel, The Picture of Darla Gray, was rejected for being too far-fetched and not homoerotic enough. Charlotte the ninja Brëntà really didn't write much of anything else, the royalties on Jane Eyre having been enough for her to move to Martha's Vineyard, where she finished her days drinking long island ice teas (without the tea) and flirting with female poolboys.
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