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Der Professor (1857)

von Charlotte Brontë

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2,737445,255 (3.33)90
Der Professor ist der früheste, 1857 postum erschienene Roman von Charlotte Brontë (1816-1855). Wie in ihrem späteren Roman "Villette" verarbeitete sie auch hier Eindrücke aus ihrer Brüsseler Pensionatszeit als Schülerin und Lehrerin, als sie sich in einer unerwiderten Leidenschaft zum Direktor des Instituts befangen sah. Nun ist es ein männlicher Erzähler, ein armer englischer Lehrer, der sich, ebenfalls in einem Brüsseler Pensionat, in eine Schülerin verliebt, sie heiratet und als Besitzer einer Privatschule zu Erfolg kommt. Gut die Schilderung von Charakteren, Milieu und Landschaften… (mehr)
  1. 20
    Harte Zeiten von Charles Dickens (CurrerBell)
    CurrerBell: The Professor and Hard Times don't have all that much in common — and even less so do CB and CD have that much in common — but there's an interesting conversational exchange in The Professor, in the last chapter but one, that reminds me of the "reason vs. sensibility" theme in Hard Times.… (mehr)
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For reasons I don't fully understand, I decided to read all the books written by the Brönte sisters. Emily wrote one book, Wuthering Heights, which IMHO is the worst of the lot. Everyone in the book is an irredeemable asshole. How is reading about such people interesting? Then, Anne wrote two, which no one ever reads except hard-core Literature nerds, and Charlotte wrote four, of which Jane Eyre is the most famous, and also the absolute best of the lot. Anyway, I'm finishing up this project on wading through the four Charlotte's. This is the third of the four I need to read to finish up my project.

FWIW, the whole point of this project is to make myself totally unique: I'm the only person who ever lived who has kicked a Nobel Lauriate in the shins (Dudley Herschbach), and, also, read all the novels written by the three Brönte sisters. At least that's my claim. Please correct me if you can.

Anyway, in this book, William Crimsworth is a young man who was brought up as a gentleman, but who has essentially no means. His family say they'll give him a competence if he will take up being a minister in the local church, and marry someone in particular, a cousin of some sort? He refuses, and is cut loose. He heads off to Belgium and gets a post as an English teacher in a private school. In Belgium, teachers are called "professors".

So, Crimsworth has adventures in Belgium. The woman who runs the girls school next door flirts with him for a bit. She also hires him to teach a class at her school, and Crimsworth becomes fascinated by one of his students, Francis Henri. Naturally, after lots of goings on, they get together, find themselves a way back to England and live happily ever after, or some such. ( )
  lgpiper | Jan 8, 2024 |
It's been a long time since I've felt so relieved to be finished with a book! This was the most boring and irritating read I've encountered in a really long time. I would have abandoned it except it meets two of my reading challenges and I want to be able to say I've read all the Brontes.

Before I started reading the book, I wrote this: "I've always had a negative impression of CB… I think it’s Elizabeth Gaskell’s fault. I try to give her the benefit of the doubt but can’t seem to shake it. Somebody make me like her!!! ( )
  classyhomemaker | Dec 11, 2023 |
Having just read a major Bronte biography I decided to read or re-read the Bronte sisters' novels starting with this first one of Charlotte's. However, although I remember loving "Jane Eyre", first read as a child, I didn't care for her first attempt. The plot is rambling and uneven, and the characters are not convincing. The hero, William Crimsworth, has been given a good education by his deceased mother's brothers, but they disown him when he refuses to go into the church as they want him to, since he lacks a vocation. He tries to become an industrialist by starting as a clerk at his older brother's firm, but the brother is extremely rude to him and does not acknowledge their relationship. An odd man called Hunsden, another man of business in the town, does him a "favour" by getting him sacked, but he does give him a letter of introduction to a friend in Brussels, and it is through that contact that William obtains a job he seems suited for - teacher at a boys' school. The school is owned by a man called Pelet who after a while tells him that the female head of the school next door would also like to engage him for English lessons for the girl pupils. Much of the story therefore is about what happens at the school and his entanglement with the headmistress and an unprepossessing teacher of needlework.

Although the author seems to have intended this to be a non-melodramatic story which tells of an ordinary man who gets on by stint of his own efforts, it does still rely on certain other characters putting themselves out for William, such as his odd friend Hunsden and a rich man in Brussels. In the case of the latter, William tells us that he is able to apply to this man for a recommendation to get him his next teaching job because he saved the man's son from drowning - this is then described at that point rather than earlier in the history where it belongs and seems rather too convenient and indeed, melodramatic.

Given that Charlotte spent time in Brussels at a girls' school situated next door to a school for boys - the two being run by a married couple - the major part of the book draws on her own experience and perhaps on her own prejudices. She and her sister Emily began by being pupils at the girls' school, and Charlotte went on to become a teacher there. It is clear that they kept a distance between themselves and the other pupils (in a letter she refers to herself and Emily being alone among numbers - an almost identical phrase used by her protagonist), and that she later felt isolated among the other teachers (in another letter she describes the utter misery of being left alone at the school during a holiday when the other teachers had all decamped to their family homes). Part of the reason was their different religion: nearly everyone else at the school was Roman Catholic rather than Protestant. While isolated at the school, Charlotte became desperate enough to go to the cathedral and confess (about her inappropriate attraction to the headmaster), and her later prejudice against Roman Catholics seems to date from that incident. The novel shows remarkable prejudice against the Flemish and some other European races, who are described very unflatteringly, and one of the major strikes against them is their Roman Catholicism, so it seems unavoidable that a lot of the narrator's prejudices are actually the author's own.

The characters most clearly developed in the book are the unpleasant ones, principally the headmaster and headmistress of the Belgian schools. Although not yet married when William starts work there, it is possible that the author has drawn on her own jaundiced views of their real-life equivalents. The headmistress in particular is very two-faced, and Charlotte certainly viewed her actual employer as being like that. The other major female character is William's love interest Frances, but she is rather a cipher and is chiefly characterised by her subservient devotion to her 'maitre' which it seems can be translated either as teacher or master.

The unevenness of the plot is shown by the fact that, after the main school part, a year and then ten years whizz past with just a summary. I also wasn't convinced that, even if Frances had run a successful school, they would have enough money for retirement to a nice house in the English countryside. The ending is also odd with its hint that Hunsden might somehow be contaminating their son with his cynical views.

One other problem is the annoying proportion of untranslated French for a reader not fluent in French, especially in a key scene where the narrator proposes to Frances - in fact, I looked up a copy on Project Gutenberg and copy/pasted some of the dialogue into a French to English translation engine just to find out what was being said.

All in all, this was rather a disappointment. I believe Charlotte reworked her Brussels experiences into 'Villette' so am hoping that will be rather better than this. As I couldn't enjoy it, I can only award it one star. ( )
  kitsune_reader | Nov 23, 2023 |
I remember my first read of Jane Eyre when I devoured about 15 chapters in one sitting and this had a similar grab on me but then ended up getting shoved aside for books higher on my list and now I wish I had read it in just a day or two. I really enjoyed it but I lost some of the better plot connections by putting it aside so much. There is a note of Jane Eyre with the narrator, Crimsworth, having a difficult early time with people who just hate him for existing at all. He has some of Jane's strength of character and I grew to appreciate and root for him. My main issues is just the national and religious stereotypes that are both jarring to a modern ear and generally I found offensive. They might be ideas that existed then but I didn't like them anyway and they seemed to be without purpose in the narrative. Certainly, Crimsworth could dislike his French and Flemish students without making them national examples. But overall, I really did enjoy reading this lesser known work and look forward to the last one I haven't read.

I do have a minor complaint that my edition did not include any translations of the French and I struggled to figure that out but I think I managed to work out at least some of the meaning.
  amyem58 | Feb 28, 2023 |
It's a good thing Charlotte Bronte got to publish Jane Eyre first.
She meant this to be her first novel, but it was rejected by publishers and only printed posthumously. It's a valuable work, as it shows her developing skill, and it certainly has some intriguing storytelling, but it also has noticeable flaws.
In this story, William Crimsworth has to make his way in the world due to a lack of harmony between him and various family members who might otherwise have helped him. He starts out in trade, working for his brother, who makes it very clear that he has no family feeling and no compassion at all. When this situation becomes untenable, Crimsworth ends up in Belgium and finds a position as an English professor at a boys' school.
The school next door is for girls, and eventually Crimsworth is hired to teach some classes for them as well. Not having been around very many females in his life, he is initally a little overcome, but he masters himself and finds pride in being a stern, no-nonsense teacher.
He is initially captivated by the directress of the school, a Mademoiselle Reuters. Later he is drawn to a young, quiet sewing instructor named Frances Henri.

The characters are very interesting and the story well told for the first half (or perhaps more) of the book. I found Charlotte Bronte's storytelling quite compelling; there is a power in it, but it also seems unexpectedly revealing of her personality. Once one has read a few Charlotte Bronte novels (of course, there are only about four in total!) one gets an idea of what she must have been like.

For one thing, I would argue that her main characters never really begin with any immaturity or uncertainty that they must age out of. They are all very self-aware, complacent about their own abilities, fairly proud, and decided in their opinions. Did Charlotte Bronte view herself as having a similar mental or moral superiority to her contemporaries? I suspect she did.

I enjoyed this book right up until the denouement finished, when Crimsworth gets married. After that, the rest of the novel is one really long summing-up. Bronte takes us through the next ten years of his life, doing a lot of telling and not a lot of showing, and the plot is gone. I don't mind a flashing forward in time that takes up a page or two at the end. But I really think that plot should still be happening up until that point.

Also, Frances Henri, who becomes Crimsworth's wife, could have been an interesting character--and she was, until they got engaged. She was a bit mysterious, with unplumbed depths of talent and imagination. After the engagement, though, she is described in terms rather too like a doll or a possession for a modern reader to be entirely comfortable with her. Bronte tries to give her still a certain independence, but it doesn't quite work for some reason. Perhaps it's because the story is being told from a man's point of view, and he comes off as rather patronizing. We know Charlotte Bronte can sustain interesting females--after all, Jane Eyre always retains a certain spirit and fight no matter what the state of her relationship with Rochester.

All things considered, I'm much more on board with Charlotte Bronte's novels that are told from a female perspective. One wonders what she herself thought of The Professor. ( )
  Alishadt | Feb 25, 2023 |
keine Rezensionen | Rezension hinzufügen

» Andere Autoren hinzufügen (21 möglich)

AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Brontë, CharlotteHauptautoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Davidson, FrederickErzählerCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Glen, HeatherHerausgeberCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Pyne, GeorgeUmschlagillustrationCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Rosengarten, HerbertHerausgeberCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Smith, MargaretHerausgeberCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Tute, GeorgeIllustratorCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Ward, Mary A. [Mrs Humphry]EinführungCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Wilson, MarionCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt

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The other day, in looking over my papers, I found in my desk the following copy of a letter sent by me a year since to an old school acquaintance: - 'DEAR CHARLES, - I think when you and I were at Eton together, we were neither of us what could be called popular characters; you were a sarcastic, observant, shrewd, cold-blooded creature; my own portrait I will not attempt to draw, but I cannot recollect that it was a strikingly attractive one - can you?
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Some of these include Emma as well; those should be separated from editions that include only The Professor.
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Der Professor ist der früheste, 1857 postum erschienene Roman von Charlotte Brontë (1816-1855). Wie in ihrem späteren Roman "Villette" verarbeitete sie auch hier Eindrücke aus ihrer Brüsseler Pensionatszeit als Schülerin und Lehrerin, als sie sich in einer unerwiderten Leidenschaft zum Direktor des Instituts befangen sah. Nun ist es ein männlicher Erzähler, ein armer englischer Lehrer, der sich, ebenfalls in einem Brüsseler Pensionat, in eine Schülerin verliebt, sie heiratet und als Besitzer einer Privatschule zu Erfolg kommt. Gut die Schilderung von Charakteren, Milieu und Landschaften

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