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John Pfordresher is a professor of English at Georgetown University in Washington, DC.

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Studies in Bibliography (Vol. 26) — Mitwirkender — 2 Exemplare

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Georgetown University (BA, English, 1965)
University of Minnesota (PhD)
Kurzbiographie
John Pfordresher is a Professor of English interested in Nineteenth-Century literature; the relationship of painting to literature in the Nineteenth century; Anglophone writers in Italy; and Catholic Studies. Pfordresher earned his Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota and B.A. from Georgetown College. Publications include: "Variorum Edition: Tennyson's Idylls of the King" (1973); "Matthew Arnold. The Prose," in "The Critical Heritage" Series (1979); miscellaneous essays on Browning, Tennyson, Dickens, D. G. Rossetti and Pre-Raphaelite art; position papers on the teaching of literature; essays on Anglophone writing on Italy; and "Jesus and the Emergence of a Catholic Imagination" (2008); His latest book, "The Secret History of Jane Eyre. How Charlotte Brontë Wrote Her Masterpiece" was published in 2017.

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Note: I accessed a digital review copy of this book through Edelweiss.
 
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fernandie | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 15, 2022 |
I grabbed this book because of the cover (gorgeous) and the fact that I'm not a huge Jane Eyre fan and I kind of want to be. (I mean, it seems like a book I should be all over.) I love books about books, stories that dive into the nitty-gritty and ineffable magic of writing a novel. And I'm always up to learn more about books and how, possibly, to read them.

But this one really disappointed me.

Pfordresher's argument -- his 'secret history' -- is that Brontë mined her own life for Jane Eyre. (No duh.) But he pushes a literal person-for-person sort of equivalency that really disappointed me; while arguing for Brontë's creative genius, I couldn't help but feel like he was minimizing it in this manner.

There are also some intense leaps that just seemed a stretch to me. For example, Rochester's agonizing sexual frustration reflects "...a sexual energy Charlotte Brontë knew, daily, at Haworth," (p82), from the apparent expression of her sexually frustrated father. (Perhaps true, but also, ew. Really?)  I've got five pages of highlights of moments like that; Pfordresher is bold, I'll give him that.

My biggest takeaway of this read was a developed dislike for Brontë as a person. In Pfordresher's hands, she seems to hate other women, bubbles with barely concealed disdain for the world around her save for her beloved moors, and wanted desperately to get into a dom/sub romantic relationship with someone.

I'd love for a Brontë and/or Jane Eyre fan to read this one and share their thoughts, because I can't tell if I'm not getting it or not. It's a short read (191 pages in my edition) so someone pick it up and discuss with me!
… (mehr)
 
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unabridgedchick | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 7, 2017 |
 
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tenamouse67 | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 6, 2018 |

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