A contribution to the recent 15th International Research Conference on Education, Language and Literature (IRCEELT), which was hosted by the International Black Sea University (IBSU) in Tbilisi, Georgia, last year. Love, Hate and Vengeance in Emily ...
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"BrontëBlog" - 5 new articles

  1. Love, Hate and Vengeance
  2. 'Liberty was the breath of Emily’s nostrils'
  3. Deborah Lutz and Essie Fox at the Scarborough Book Festival
  4. Her difficult path to happiness
  5. In conversation with Deborah Lutz
  6. More Recent Articles

Love, Hate and Vengeance

A contribution to the recent 15th International Research Conference on Education, Language and Literature (IRCEELT), which was hosted by the International Black Sea University (IBSU) in Tbilisi, Georgia, last year.
Manana Aslanishvili, Georgian Technical University, Georgia, manana.58@mail.ru 
IRCEELT 2025: 15th International Research Conference on Education, Language and Literature

Emily Bronte was a prominent English novelist and poet of the 19th century, best known for her only novel, “Wuthering Heights”, now regarded as a classic of English literature. The novel was published under masculine pen name, Ellis Bell, in 1847. “Wuthering Heights” is a story of revenge and doomed love. It features harsh moments of cruelty and sexual passion. Although published during the Victorian period, “Wuthering Heights” deviated from the literary norms of the time as it exceptionally represented different aspects, raised diverse questions and addressed more serious issues than those that concerned Victorian era. Instead of celebrating the spirit of the Victorian age, the novel skillfully portrays and reflects more practical and vitally important aspects of people’s lives such as love, hate, revenge, personal relationships, and friendship. The novel depicts the power and passion of intense love as well as the dark and evil side of human nature. It revolves around the love relationship between Catherine and Heathcliff, the climax of which is a tragedy since the love ends up in revenge. The reunion in death of the two lovers constitutes their achievement of complete freedom and love. Though, Emily Bronte published only one novel, “Wuthering Heights” (1847), but that single work has its place among the masterpieces of English literature.

   

'Liberty was the breath of Emily’s nostrils'

The i Paper reviews Deborah Lutz's biography of Emily Brontë, This Dark Night.
If you were confused by all the bondage and masturbation in Emerald Fennell’s controversial Wuthering Heights film released earlier this year, look no further for explanations than this quietly punchy biography of the 19th-century masterpiece’s author, Emily Brontë.
In The Dark Night, we see her scribbling violent pornographic sketches in the middle of Latin translations, while her brother Branwell draws men seemingly participating in acts of group self-pleasure. The Brontës, biographer and Victorian scholar Deborah Lutz shows us, were racier than they looked.
Unlike Fennell’s protagonists though, this book suggests that Emily’s interest in all this was not really erotic but more a kind of existentialist exploration of what bodies are, where they begin and end. She was obsessed with the transience of the flesh, following the early loss of her mother Maria, who died when she was just three. “These seven months with her mother in a liminal state – almost dead but still with the living – would stay with Emily,” writes Lutz. “Where did life end and death begin?” [...]
“Thoughts of leaving the body behind occupied Emily,” Lutz continues. Later Emily would write in one of her best poems: “I’m happiest when most away, I can bear my soul from its home of clay.” The prospect of a soul freeing itself from its corporeal home sparks in her a sort of literary ecstasy, that is surely at the root of Heathcliff’s obsession with Catherine’s ghost and corpse in Wuthering Heights.
The book is not solely focused, however, on how Emily’s experiences shaped her one and only novel. Lutz’s patient prose does not rush to a reductive affinity between her life and her life’s work. It is more interested in the siblings’ lives, how they convened and diverged. Their parents were unusually keen, for the time, on educating girls, and the house was always full of reading and writing. The young girls invented a fantasy land called Gondal ruled mostly by women, where they honed their female-centred storytelling skills. [...]
Lutz writes: “The fact that these novels were all hammered out in fellowship, one mixed with competition and love would make [the idea that they strongly influenced one another] not at all surprising.”
Although Lutz acknowledges the much-written-about “tussle” between the “usually reserved Emily” and her more sociable sister Charlotte (a teacher wrote that Emily exercised “a kind of unconscious tyranny” over Charlotte), she is also at pains to emphasise this “fellowship”. So often Emily Brontë is painted as singular and isolated, but what Lutz makes clear is that Wuthering Heights was written in anything but a vacuum.
Lutz is intermittently hampered by a lack of actual evidence. As was common at the time, Emily’s letters were burned by her family following her death (mere months after the publication of Wuthering Heights) to protect her privacy, and there are moments where the speculations feel far-reaching: “Emily’s feelings about her time abroad remain unknown. But the experience had to have been momentous.”
Still, we get a good sense of her personality, even if it is often gleaned from piecemeal sources. Yes, she is introverted, but also “intensely loveable”, writes Ellen, Charlotte’s best friend. Passionate about nature and animals, she is “a night-sky obsessive” who adopts a falcon and carries her books up to the moors, bestowing on plants an anthropomorphic sensibility (a bluebell is “a sacred whatcher”).
She is ferociously intellectual but a skilled housekeeper and keen observer too of the domestic in her writing. In the end, Lutz finds, Emily Brontë was both as reserved and eccentric as she has typically been painted, but more complex too. Charlotte perhaps put it best when she wrote of her sister: “Emily loved the moors… She found in the bleak solitude many and dear delights; and not the least and best loved was… liberty. Liberty was the breath of Emily’s nostrils. Without it she perished.” (Francesca Steele)
Clara (Spain) recommends 7 books to read (including The Tenant of Wildfell Hall) if you liked Wuthering Heights. A contributor to Her Campus shares her review of the 2026 film adaptation of the novel.
   

Deborah Lutz and Essie Fox at the Scarborough Book Festival

A couple of Brontë-related events at the Scarborough Book Festival, Books by the Beach 2026:
Deborah Lutz's The Life of Emily Brontë
Fri Jun 5th 10:00am - 11:00am
Queen Street Methodist Church : Scarborough, Queen St, Scarborough YO11 1HQ, UK  

DEBORAH LUTZ  In conversation with  Helen Boaden. At the opening event we immerse ourselves in  the world of Emily Brontë. Scholar, author and  Brontë specialist Deborah Lutz is here from the USA  to share her expertise and introduce her new book  This Dark Night. The first full biography of Emily in  over two decades, it reveals the events, delights  and tragedies of the Brontë world which inspired  her writing and offers a fresh take on her short but  momentous life. A must-see event for all lovers  of Brontë storytelling. 
Essie Fox, Wuthering Heights Reimagined
Fri Jun 5th 12:30pm - 1:30pm
Queen Street Methodist Church : Scarborough, Queen St, Scarborough YO11 1HQ, UK  

ESSIE FOX  In conversation with Gerry Foley. You thought you knew Wuthering Heights…  what if you were wrong? Staying in the Emily  Brontë theme we welcome queen of the gothic  and bestselling author of seven historical novels,  Essie Fox. Essie has reimagined the Brontë  classic from a new angle; in the narrative voice  of Catherine Earnshaw. Essie’s novel Catherine  is a haunting and atmospheric retelling.  Nelly Dean told only half the story…this version  sees Catherine rise from the grave to tell her own.

   

Her difficult path to happiness

A Youngish Perspective interviews Eleanor Zeal, writer of the play Jane Eyre Convention.
This piece brings together Jane Eyre and a modern-day fan convention. What first sparked that idea for you?
Several years ago I became aware of several new film adaptations of Jane Eyre and even though I’d read it at school I wondered why it was so enduringly popular. Going back and re-reading made it clear that the rags to riches narrative was very compelling as is the complex central character of Jane Eyre, a plain and humble heroine. I discovered that Jane Eyre is the second most produced and adapted novel, after Frankenstein by Mary Shelley. It was then a natural leap to imagine obsessive fans/readers wanting to have their own convention where they could actually be the character they loved and follow her difficult path to happiness. [...]
Jane Eyre continues to inspire such passionate audiences. What do you think keeps people returning to it?
I think people just love the idea of an underdog being successful. Ordinary people can relate to Jane’s humble beginnings and be inspired by her extraordinary character and determination in the face of adversity. It’s also a story about women and class so we can appreciate the inequalities of her time and how she navigates that.
Inviting audiences to bring “bonnets and emotions” creates a very particular atmosphere. What kind of experience are you hoping people step into?
The wearing of bonnets is of course entirely optional and there are also imaginary bonnets beneath each seat. It’s a way of bringing the re-enactment convention to life and allowing the audience to feel part of the story and the convention. They are addressed as if they are fellow attendees and invited at various points to join in with the various strong  emotions being expressed. The majority of the team are also drama therapists so they are used to facilitating emotional release. This is not therapeutic theatre per se but it may have a mildly therapeutic effect.
Beneath the comedy, the show explores the dilemmas and emotions within Jane Eyre. What conversations are you hoping to open up through that?
The piece is of it’s time but the plot device of a first wife and black woman locked in the attic feels like it should be explored so we attempt to rehabilitate Bertha and give her a voice. We also explore Charlotte Brontë’s early feminism as expressed through Jane. We know that originally the novel was published under a male pseudonym as women were not considered capable. The play then looks at how male voices are still louder and more powerful via the characters at the convention and the arguments/conversations they have. One character has a boyfriend who we learn is fairly abusive and controlling which echos some of the characters in the novel.
Firstpost wonders, 'Why does every period drama character look like they have an iPhone face?'
The issue here is rarely about the acting talent involved, but rather the cumulative effect of current beauty standards on the performer’s face. Take, for example, the recent discourse surrounding Emerald Fennell’s adaptation of Wuthering Heights. The casting of Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi prompted significant online discussion, with some viewers noting that their appearances, while undeniably striking, felt jarringly modern.
They appeared less like inhabitants of the desolate Yorkshire moors and more like figures poised for a contemporary social media grid. Similarly, the criticism directed toward Dakota Johnson in her adaptation of Persuasion (with very arched eyebrows) highlighted how modern grooming and the omnipresence of current cosmetic trends can shatter a narrative’s historical illusion. When the faces of our protagonists are so visibly shaped by today’s beauty trends, it becomes difficult for the viewer to suspend their disbelief. (Treya Sinha)
According to Soy Carmín, Jane Eyre is one of '5 Romantic Novels That Sparked Outrageous Scandals When First Published'.
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë
When Charlotte Brontë released her Gothic romance in 1847 under the male pseudonym Currer Bell, it became an instant bestseller but deeply divided Victorian society. Critics were absolutely horrified by the sheer independence and fierce determination of the main character. One reviewer even claimed it would be no credit to anyone to be the author of such a book. The massive scandal centered around the fact that Brontë placed genuine intellectual power, passion, and authority squarely into the hands of a young woman who dared to overstep conventional rules. Conservative readers viewed this display of female autonomy as entirely anti-Christian and anti-authority. Personal opinion: this is the best part because the exact qualities that nineteenth-century critics attacked as vice are the precise reasons why millions of readers still love the book today. (Jesús López)
Writer Cynthia Gómez writes about reading Gothic classics in an article for CrimeReads.
I’ve been a fan of Gothic literature since before I even knew what the word meant. When I was eight or nine our family listened to Dracula (an abridged version) on a road trip; I was reading The Secret Garden for fun when I was ten. Together, those served as my gateway drug, leading me to the trashy Goth wonderland of V.C. Andrews, and then to Jane Eyre, which I read in the basement guest room of my grandparents’ house in the mountains, a place only reachable by a narrow, winding road.
   

In conversation with Deborah Lutz

An alert for tomorrow, June 4, in Haworth:
Thu 4 Jun, 6:30pm
Brontë Event Space at the Old School Room

This Dark Night: The Life of Emily Brontë – a rare event with globally renowned scholar, author and Emily Brontë expert Deborah Lutz
Come along for your chance to meet the globally renowned Emily Brontë expert Deborah Lutz and be among the first to hear her speak about her just released book This Dark Night: The Life of Emily Brontë (publishing 28th May and available to buy from the Museum shop).
The first full biography of Emily Brontë in over two decades,This Dark Night is unique, eye-opening and offers a fresh take on her short but momentous life.
In this event, Deborah Lutz will take you inside the world of Emily’s irrepressible spirit and wild imagination like never before. Deborah will be in discussion with Yvette Huddleston offering illuminating readings of Emily’s poems and a greater understanding of the politics and events of the era, as well as the delights and tragedies of family life that Lutz shows directly inspired much of Emily and her sisters’ writing in her book.

   

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