CCU MAW ENGL 628 Dashboard

Description

Jane Eyre, Re-writing the Gothic Bildungsroman for 21-st Century Popular Culture:

Jane Eyre: An Autobiography (1847) by Charlotte Brontë is a seminal text in the Western feminist literature canon, published fifty-five years after Mary Wollstonecraft’s A Vindication of the Rights of Woman and a year before the Seneca Falls convention launched the feminist movement in Western culture. But more impressively, it is a popular novel that has never once gone out of print in one-hundred and seventy-four years. And scores of authors, directors, and digital producers have adapted, revised, and modernized Bronte’s most famous novel because the narrative still has something to teach us. What better text could a class of writers study in order to explore what makes a story not only timeless but also popular and highbrow? As bell hooks—the recently deceased, trailblazing Black feminist scholar and activist—declared, “Whether we're talking about race or gender or class, popular culture is where the pedagogy is, it's where the learning is.”

As writers, we will explore the creative and rhetorical choices select twentieth- and twenty-first-century authors and directors have made when appropriating Jane Eyre’s narrative, paying attention to how each Jane is a positive (or negative) role model of physical, emotional, and spiritual growth. In other words, we are going to explore how this piece of classic literature remains relevant because of Jane’s didactic appeal within 21st-century popular culture. In this course, we will also leverage the COVE’s (Collaborative Organization for Virtual Education) digital tools in order to create a collaborative “flipped classroom” learning experience.

Galleries, Timelines, and Maps

There is no content in this group.

Individual Entries

Place
Posted by Nicole Conner on Wednesday, January 12, 2022 - 14:42

Funchal Morning Sun by Edward Poynter, 19th century.

The island of Madeira was colonized in 1425, after the initial discovery of Porto Santo in 1418 by three Portuguese sailors under the command of Prince Henry the Navigator (“History of Madeira Island” para 4). The following year, the sailors were told to further explore what appeared to be “a dark mass of clouds on the southern horizon” (para 3). This exploration would lead to the discovery of Madeira and King John I of Portugal would order for the island to be colonized  in 1425 (para 4). Sugar cane would be introduced to the island, which would make Funchal, Madeira a main point of trade for Europe. However, it was in the seventeenth century that wine was...

more

Pages