{"title":"牧师住宅的战争:Brontës与军事冲突","authors":"Simon Avery","doi":"10.1093/jvcult/vcac043","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In 2015, the Brontë Parsonage Museum in Haworth curated an important exhibition to commemorate the bicentenary of the Battle of Waterloo and the Brontë family’s engagement with its politics and legacies. Bringing together military-orientated books that were owned by the family (such as Walter Scott’s Life of Napoleon), drawings and watercolour paintings by the children (such as Branwell’s disturbing depiction of conflict simply entitled Terror), and intriguing artefacts from the Museum’s collection (including a bust of Wellington and a fragment of Napoleon’s original coffin which was given to Charlotte by Monsieur Heger), the exhibition beautifully depicted the multiple ways in which Haworth’s most famous family were fascinated by, and responded to, ideas of war and conflict throughout their lives and careers. The exhibition was housed in a smallish room separated from the main exhibition area, which created both an intense viewing experience – the walls and cases were full of objects and information – and suggested that, after our immersion in the domestic and literary lives of the Brontës in the key exhibition rooms, we also need to bear in mind how engaged the family were in the wider world and in debates about history and socio-political transformation. For as Terry Eagleton neatly phrased it in Myths of Power, his ground-breaking Marxist study of the sisters’ mature writings, ‘the Brontës lived through an era of disruptive social change, and lived that disruption at a particularly vulnerable point’.1 The instigator of this exhibition was Emma Butcher, whose important research on the Brontë family’s understanding and manipulation of military conflict is the subject of her first monograph, The Brontës and War: Fantasy and Conflict in Charlotte and Branwell Brontë’s Youthful Writings. Taking as its key focus the Glass Town and Angria sagas which were developed by Charlotte and Branwell across the 1820s and 1830s, Butcher’s engaging analysis builds upon the work of critics like Christine Alexander, Heather Glen, and Victor Neufeldt, who have established the centrality of the siblings’ early writings to their literary careers.2 By focusing on a specific topic running throughout these writings, Butcher demonstrates again how fertile the material is for serious critical consideration. For in addition to providing some of the foundations for the siblings’ mature writings, this youthful work effectively reveals the","PeriodicalId":43921,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Victorian Culture","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2022-05-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"War at t’ Parsonage: The Brontës and Military Conflict\",\"authors\":\"Simon Avery\",\"doi\":\"10.1093/jvcult/vcac043\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"In 2015, the Brontë Parsonage Museum in Haworth curated an important exhibition to commemorate the bicentenary of the Battle of Waterloo and the Brontë family’s engagement with its politics and legacies. Bringing together military-orientated books that were owned by the family (such as Walter Scott’s Life of Napoleon), drawings and watercolour paintings by the children (such as Branwell’s disturbing depiction of conflict simply entitled Terror), and intriguing artefacts from the Museum’s collection (including a bust of Wellington and a fragment of Napoleon’s original coffin which was given to Charlotte by Monsieur Heger), the exhibition beautifully depicted the multiple ways in which Haworth’s most famous family were fascinated by, and responded to, ideas of war and conflict throughout their lives and careers. The exhibition was housed in a smallish room separated from the main exhibition area, which created both an intense viewing experience – the walls and cases were full of objects and information – and suggested that, after our immersion in the domestic and literary lives of the Brontës in the key exhibition rooms, we also need to bear in mind how engaged the family were in the wider world and in debates about history and socio-political transformation. For as Terry Eagleton neatly phrased it in Myths of Power, his ground-breaking Marxist study of the sisters’ mature writings, ‘the Brontës lived through an era of disruptive social change, and lived that disruption at a particularly vulnerable point’.1 The instigator of this exhibition was Emma Butcher, whose important research on the Brontë family’s understanding and manipulation of military conflict is the subject of her first monograph, The Brontës and War: Fantasy and Conflict in Charlotte and Branwell Brontë’s Youthful Writings. Taking as its key focus the Glass Town and Angria sagas which were developed by Charlotte and Branwell across the 1820s and 1830s, Butcher’s engaging analysis builds upon the work of critics like Christine Alexander, Heather Glen, and Victor Neufeldt, who have established the centrality of the siblings’ early writings to their literary careers.2 By focusing on a specific topic running throughout these writings, Butcher demonstrates again how fertile the material is for serious critical consideration. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
2015年,霍沃斯的布朗特牧师博物馆策划了一场重要展览,以纪念滑铁卢战役200周年以及布朗特家族参与其政治和遗产。将家族所有的军事书籍(如沃尔特·斯科特的《拿破仑的一生》)、孩子们的绘画和水彩画(如布兰威尔对冲突的令人不安的描述,简称《恐怖》)汇集在一起,以及博物馆收藏的有趣文物(包括惠灵顿半身像和黑格先生送给夏洛特的拿破仑原棺碎片),展览完美地描绘了霍沃斯最著名的家族在其一生和职业生涯中对战争和冲突的想法着迷并做出回应的多种方式。展览被安置在一个与主展区分离的小房间里,这创造了一种强烈的观看体验——墙壁和箱子里充满了物品和信息——并表明,在我们沉浸在主要展厅中布朗特人的家庭和文学生活中之后,我们还需要记住,这个家庭是如何融入更广阔的世界,参与关于历史和社会政治变革的辩论的。正如特里·伊格尔顿(Terry Eagleton)在《权力的神话》(Myths of Power)一书中巧妙地表达的那样,他对这对姐妹成熟作品进行了开创性的马克思主义研究,“勃朗特一家经历了一个破坏性社会变革的时代,并在一个特别脆弱的时刻经历了这种破坏”,她的第一本专著《勃朗特与战争:夏洛特的幻想与冲突》和《布兰维尔·布朗特的青春写作》的主题是她对勃朗特家族理解和操纵军事冲突的重要研究。布彻将夏洛特和布兰威尔在19世纪20年代和19世纪30年代创作的《玻璃城》和《安格里亚传奇》作为其重点,其引人入胜的分析建立在克里斯汀·亚历山大、希瑟·格伦和维克托·诺伊费尔特等评论家的作品之上,他们确立了兄弟姐妹早期作品在他们文学生涯中的中心地位。2通过关注贯穿这些作品的特定主题,布彻再次证明了这些材料是多么丰富,值得认真的批判性思考。因为除了为兄弟姐妹成熟的作品奠定一些基础外,这部年轻的作品有效地揭示了
War at t’ Parsonage: The Brontës and Military Conflict
In 2015, the Brontë Parsonage Museum in Haworth curated an important exhibition to commemorate the bicentenary of the Battle of Waterloo and the Brontë family’s engagement with its politics and legacies. Bringing together military-orientated books that were owned by the family (such as Walter Scott’s Life of Napoleon), drawings and watercolour paintings by the children (such as Branwell’s disturbing depiction of conflict simply entitled Terror), and intriguing artefacts from the Museum’s collection (including a bust of Wellington and a fragment of Napoleon’s original coffin which was given to Charlotte by Monsieur Heger), the exhibition beautifully depicted the multiple ways in which Haworth’s most famous family were fascinated by, and responded to, ideas of war and conflict throughout their lives and careers. The exhibition was housed in a smallish room separated from the main exhibition area, which created both an intense viewing experience – the walls and cases were full of objects and information – and suggested that, after our immersion in the domestic and literary lives of the Brontës in the key exhibition rooms, we also need to bear in mind how engaged the family were in the wider world and in debates about history and socio-political transformation. For as Terry Eagleton neatly phrased it in Myths of Power, his ground-breaking Marxist study of the sisters’ mature writings, ‘the Brontës lived through an era of disruptive social change, and lived that disruption at a particularly vulnerable point’.1 The instigator of this exhibition was Emma Butcher, whose important research on the Brontë family’s understanding and manipulation of military conflict is the subject of her first monograph, The Brontës and War: Fantasy and Conflict in Charlotte and Branwell Brontë’s Youthful Writings. Taking as its key focus the Glass Town and Angria sagas which were developed by Charlotte and Branwell across the 1820s and 1830s, Butcher’s engaging analysis builds upon the work of critics like Christine Alexander, Heather Glen, and Victor Neufeldt, who have established the centrality of the siblings’ early writings to their literary careers.2 By focusing on a specific topic running throughout these writings, Butcher demonstrates again how fertile the material is for serious critical consideration. For in addition to providing some of the foundations for the siblings’ mature writings, this youthful work effectively reveals the