Showing posts with label jane eyre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jane eyre. Show all posts

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Sexing the Classics

Jo Page, who visited the Institute in March, ponders the forthcoming Fifty Shades of Grey versions of literary classics in Metroland column "Reckonings" this week:

"You’d think with all the sex there is in the world of literature—Poe with his necrophilia, Hawthorne with his adultery, Mailer and Miller and Updike and Roth with all manner of erotic expressiveness—that we wouldn’t need to go looking for more titillation. But maybe we do...."

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Thursday, February 9, 2012

Hiding from Bullies

Margot Livesey (who visits 3/20) talks with Bookpage about some of the inspirations for her new novel, The Flight of Gemma Hardy, a Scottish girl's coming-of-age story that pays homage to Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre.

Like the author herself, the novel's protagonist is the product of a rough, working class Scottish school for girls....

"....Livesey had no difficulty imagining a crumbling Scottish boarding school. As a girl, she herself was enrolled in one as a day student. Her father taught at the neighboring boys’ school and her mother was the school nurse. "

"'I ended up in a class with girls three years older than me. It was just an enormous gulf,' the author recalls. 'There were long, dark corridors, cloakrooms and stairwells. I was always hiding in some stairway trying to avoid some particularly hefty girl.'"

"The school eventually went bankrupt. 'It was one time I felt my prayers were answered,' she says, laughing at the memory." More.

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