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While biographers have widely acknowledged the importance of
family relationships to Charlotte, Emily, and Anne Brontë and to
their writing processes, literary critics have yet to give
extensive consideration to the family as a subject of the writing
itself. In "We Are Three Sisters," Drew Lamonica focuses
on the role of families in the Brontës' fictions of personal
development, exploring the ways in which their writings recognize
the family as a defining community for selfhood.
Drawing on extensive primary sources, including works by Sarah
Ellis, Sarah Lewis, Ann Richelieu Lamb, Harriet Martineau, Thomas
Carlyle, Charles Dickens, and Elizabeth Gaskell, Lamonica
examines the dialogic relationship between the Brontës' novels
and a mid-Victorian domestic ideology that held the family to be
the principal nurturer of subjectivity. Using a sociohistorical
framework, "We Are Three Sisters" shows that the Brontës'
novels display a heightened awareness of contemporary female
experience and the complex problems of securing a valued sense of
selfhood not wholly dependent on family ties.
The opening chapters discuss the mid-Victorian "culture of the
family," in which the Brontës emerged as voices exploring the
adequacy of the family as the site for personal, and particularly
female, development. These chapters also introduce the Brontës'
early collaborative writings, showing that the sisters' shared
interest in the family's formative role arose from their own
experience as a family of authors. Lamonica also examines the
seldom-recognized influences of Patrick and Branwell Brontë on
the development of the sisters' writing.
Of the numerous studies on the Brontës, comparatively few
consider all seven novels, and no previous study has undertaken
to examine the Brontës' writing in the context of mid-Victorian
ideas regarding the familyits relationships, roles, and
responsibilities. Lamonica explores in detail the various
constructions of family in the sisters' novels, concluding that
the Brontës were attuned to complexities; they were not polemical
writers with fixed feminist agendas.
The Brontës disputed the promotion of the family as the exclusive
site for female development, morality, and fulfillment, without
ever explicitly denying the possibility of domestic contentment.
In doing so, the Brontës continue to challenge our readings and
our understanding of them as mid-Victorian women. "We Are
Three Sisters" is an important addition to the study of these
fascinating women and their novels.
About the Author
Drew Lamonica is Professional in Residence at Louisiana State
University Honors College in Baton Rouge and a Rhodes Scholar.
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