Offaly Independent announces the events planned for the celebrations of Charlotte Brontë's birthday in Banagher. The Banagher Brontë Group is preparing to celebrate Charlotte Brontë's birthday on Saturday, April 18, in Crank House, Main Street, ...
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"BrontëBlog" - 5 new articles

  1. Preparing for Charlotte Brontë's birthday
  2. Guiem Soldevila's Brontë at the Brontë Birthplace
  3. Solitude and Unrequited Love
  4. Pychogeography and Female Education
  5. Ahead of their time
  6. More Recent Articles

Preparing for Charlotte Brontë's birthday

Offaly Independent announces the events planned for the celebrations of Charlotte Brontë's birthday in Banagher.
The Banagher Brontë Group is preparing to celebrate Charlotte Brontë's birthday on Saturday, April 18, in Crank House, Main Street, Banagher, commencing at 3.30pm.
The main event of the afternoon will be the world premiere of Brontës: Love and Honour, a melodic tribute to the celebrated 19th century Brontë family of Yorkshire.
This cycle of ten studio-recorded songs was written by the well-known composer Michael O'Dowd and his wife, Christine. The cycle relates the joys and sorrows of the family in music and lyrics with linking dialogue and illustrations to provide ambience and clarity.
Organisers say this will be a truly delightful and enchanting experience for all attending.
The afternoon will also include a 'Miscellany for Charlotte', a session of readings created or chosen by members of the group and others wishing to do so.
Following a series of creative writing sessions, a selection of new writings, including poems by pupils from sixth class in St Rynagh's Primary School, are ready for the celebrations.
Electric Lit reports on its March Cadness competition:
In the semifinals, Heathcliff and Edward Rochester were eliminated, depriving us of any Brontë sisters in the final round and leaving a championship matchup between Dorian Gray and George Wickham. (Evander James Reyes)
In the end, Pride and Prejudice's George Wickham won.

Yorkshire Press recommends 'Things to Do in Haworth: A Local’s Guide (Beyond the Brontë Museum)'. A contributor to Her Campus shares her thoughts on Wuthering Heights 2026.
   

Guiem Soldevila's Brontë at the Brontë Birthplace

Guiem Soldevila is performing songs from his Brontë album at the Brontë Birthplace in Thornton:
Wednesday 8 April 2026
Performance 1
Doors open: 6.30pm
Performance starts: 7.00pm – 7.45pm

Performance 2
Doors open: 7.45pm
Performance starts: 8.15pm – 9.00pm

The Brontë Birthplace is delighted to welcome internationally acclaimed Menorcan musician Guiem Soldevila for a rare and intimate recital of Brontë Poems set to music.
Guiem has created original musical settings for twelve poems written by Charlotte, Emily and Anne Brontë, transforming their words into a moving performance of voice, piano and instrumental accompaniment. The recital also features expressive contemporary dance, carefully adapted to suit the unique and intimate setting of the Birthplace.

Guiem will be performing voice, piano & guitar is accompanied by:

Clara Gorrias on voice & flute
Neus Ferri on voice & guitar
Geliah performing dance
Carme Cloquells performing narration

These performances will take place inside the café of the very house where the Brontë sisters were born, offering audiences a deeply atmospheric way to experience their poetry in song.
To preserve the intimacy of the evening, each performance is limited to just 20 guests.
   

Solitude and Unrequited Love

ShowBiz Cheatsheet highlights Must-Read Celebrity Book Club picks for this month:
Between Two Books (Florence Welch): ‘Villette’ by Charlotte Brontë
Did you know that Florence Welch has a book club? The Florence and the Machine singer periodically shares her book picks with her Between Two Books book club. This season’s pick in Villette by Charlotte Brontë. This lesser-known title from the author of Jane Eyre follows a young 19th-century woman as she leave England to take a teaching job in Belgium.
Villette is “an autobiographical study of solitude and unrequited love,” noted the Between Two Books Instagram. (Megan Elliott)
The Times Daily Quiz includes the question: 
7. The married Belgian professor Constantin Heger inspired which character in the novel Jane Eyre? (Olav Bjortomt)
The Wuthering Heights drama-rama between Sky Ferreira and Charli XCX continues to develop in the media: NME, Billboard, Daily Mail, Socialite Life,..
In a since-deleted post, the same X user also uploaded a screenshot to the platform of a text conversation with an “industry insider” who alleged that two songs on Charli’s Wuthering Heights album were “ripped” from Ferreira demos dating back to 2018 and 2015. Ferreira responded to those claims via Instagram comments as well, sharing, “Your industry ‘insider’ is wrong. Close but wrong…It isn’t worth the trouble bc I know how the world works.”‘
Ferreira is, however, credited as a featured artist, co-writer and vocal producer on Wuthering Heights track “Eyes of the World.” (...)
When asked for comment, her management team shared the following statement with Billboard: (...)
“Ahead of the Wuthering Heights album release, a standard review process was conducted on a small number of tracks from the album, including fragments of material originating from earlier sessions. This process involved managers, legal representatives, artists and producers, and included a thorough review of archival materials and demo recordings. (Lyndsey Havens)
La Razón (México) reviews the film:
Fennell tan sólo se interesó en adaptar medio libro y a unos pocos de sus personajes, pero no perdió oportunidad para sembrar sugerencias eróticas visuales y auditivas, así como insinuaciones de bondage y S&M. Lamentablemente, más que una obra estimulante, nos conduce por el terreno del fan fiction calentón, ese universo de fantasías juveniles o amateurs, a la vez morbosas y puritanas, desahogo sin literatura, “plagio” legitimizado y cursilería masturbatoria desenfrenada. (...)
Este ejercicio de estilo muestra una obsesión física muy oportuna en tiempos de looksmaxxing, en que todo mundo es bello y nadie quiere tener sexo (aun cuando lo tengan en exceso). Pero lo importante es que nos obliga a preguntarnos qué significa y para qué sirve una adaptación de la literatura al cine (especialmente al tratarse de un clásico). Y la respuesta tal vez es que sirve para ayudarnos a diferenciar el melodrama de la tragedia. (Naief Yehya) (Translation)

On Wednesday, 8 April at 6.30pm, the Boiardo cinema theatre in Scandiano (RE, Italy) will host a special screening of Wuthering Heights 2026, where the audience is invited to knit along, with dimmed lights to keep needles and eyes busy at once. The initiative grew out of a Friday knitting group led by Katia Tosi accoding to Il Resto di Carlino.

The writer Katriona O'Sullivan shares her cultural touchstones in The Irish Examiner. Regrettably, she chooses the wrong sister:
I loved Charlotte Brontë’s Wuthering Heights (sic). It’s a classic. I love a dramatic love story and it’s the ultimate bad love story. I love its imagery and its language, the way land is used to depict emotions. I was a cool kid that was with a gang who were robbing cars but reading Wuthering Heights at the end of the day, but I couldn’t tell them. You can't smoke your smokes at the back of the bike sheds while you're reading Charlotte Brontë (sic again). 
The Guardian reviews the play Victoira: A Queen Unbound at the Watermill Theatre in Newbury. In the play a well-known fact (that Queen Victoria read Jane Eyre) is mentioned: 
Teasing becomes taunting, care becomes control and sexy times on the sofa become furious spats over Christmas presents (“You gave me a brooch made of teeth, Albert!”). The relationship is coercive, yes, but perhaps also co-dependent: Victoria’s panic keeps her obedient. A scene in which she reads from Jane Eyre signals the gothic fate which, [Daisy] Goodwin imagines, Albert might have planned for her. (David Jays)

AnneBrontë.org  shares an 1853 Easter letter from Charlotte Brontë to Ellen Nussey, in which Charlotte declines a visit due to her duties as a vicar's daughter while also defending Lucy Snowe as a deliberately less idealized heroine than Jane Eyre.

   

Pychogeography and Female Education

A couple of new Brontë-related papers have been recently published:
by M.F. Rabbi
Journal of Pundra University of Science & Technology, Volume-4, Issue-1, January-2025 Issue, p. 61

Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights is a classic piece of Gothic and Romantic literature from the 19th century, and its plot intricately integrates the characters’ psychological makeup with the physical surroundings. By examining how the geographical surroundings of Wuthering Heights and Thrushcross Grange, in particular, both influence and are influenced by the inner lives and experiences of its residents, this study examines the notions of space and psychogeography in Wuthering Heights. By analyzing these two different settings, this paper makes the case that Brontë reflects social and individual divisions like freedom vs restriction, nature versus civilization, and passion versus repression through spatial dichotomies. According to this account, psychogeography studies how these landscapes function as active agents in the formation of characters’ identities and their intricate relationships rather than just serving as passive backgrounds. This study also looks at how Brontë’s book subverts conventional Victorian ideas of home and belonging by presenting a wild, surreal landscape that represents rebellious impulses and unwavering passions. Characters like Heathcliff and Catherine are depicted as symbols of the untamed and strange moor through the novel’s use of elemental forces, such as storms, winds, and isolation, which blur the lines between the internal and external worlds. This paper traces the influence of place as a dynamic, destabilizing force within Brontë’s fictional world and examines how Wuthering Heights embodies a proto-psychogeographic study that emphasizes the psychological impact of space on human behavior and identity through an analysis of spatial metaphors and imagery. In the end, this paper makes the case that Wuthering Heights’ psychogeographic elements help to depict a world ruled by wild forces and emotional extremes, providing a critique of Victorian social values through its radical reworking of spatial relationships.
by Ouana Alassane Sekongo, Université Félix Houphouët-Boigny, Côte d’Ivoire
Ziglôbitha, Revue des Arts, Linguistique,Littérature & Civilisations Université, n°17, Vol.2 – Mars 2026

In nineteenth-century England, Victorianism was an ideology based on the principle that men are more rational than women. As such, it divided the societyinto two distinct spheres, which were the private sphere for women and the public sphere for men. This paper aims to highlight that Brontë coins the character Jane, an educated and defiant girl who subverts these social norms and works hard to enterthe public space just as men. In addition to textual evidence, the article relies on Judith Butler’s (1990) theory of deconstructing gender norms in order to demonstrate how Brontë’s novel questions the Victorian gender system and opens doors for women to express themselves and reveal their talents. The study concludesthat after defying the ideology of Victorianism, Jane has not only got access to formaleducation, but also worked in the public sphere as a teacher. She, therefore, standsas a resilient an emergent girl, serving as a role model for 21st century women.

   

Ahead of their time

The Belfast Telegraph asks journalist Lesley Bootiman bookish questions.
My favour­ite clas­sic reads
I was soon drawn to the Brontë sis­ters. It wasn’t just the books, of course, it was also their story. How could you not feel pity at their situ­ation but also envy that they were able to share their writ­ing with their sib­lings? I have a battered antho­logy of Jane Eyre,
Wuther­ing Heights and The Ten­ant of Wild­fell Hall right by my desk. Char­lotte’s Jane Eyre will always call to me.
The writ­ing is decept­ively simple but the story fas­cin­at­ing, if chilling, and the heroine, as in so many of their books, ahead of her time.
If you're interested in a diva imbroglio of Sky Ferreira accusing Charli XCX of using old songs of hers for her Wuthering Heights album, then this is your news story. Movie Locations shares the filming locations used for Wuthering Heights 1970.
   

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