Monday, 18 February 2013

Austen in Adaptation - 'Emma' (2009)

    
        
Hello!

I'll eventually get around to re-reading Austen's 'Emma', which is one of my favorites - however it is not on my university reading list so I'm afraid I won't be able to properly get back into it until Easter. But because I need a dose of matchmaking chaos I am watching the BBC 2009 adaptation with Romola Garai as Emma herself and the lovely Jonny Lee Miller as Mr. Knightly. I always enjoy this version, mainly for Garai's interpretation as Emma - she's so quick and cheeky - everything good about the character. 

So, I'm going to get back to watching that for the evening and tomorrow I will talk to you about Shakespeare's 'Twelfth Night' as I have my seminar tomorrow afternoon! 

Happy reading! 

Em x

'Jane Eyre' - Charlotte Bronte

'Jane Eyre' - Charlotte Bronte:


Plot:

A young governess falls in love with her brooding and complex master. However, his dark past may destroy their relationship forever.

My Thoughts:

I liked this novel the most out of all the other Bronte novels I have read, mainly for the back story of Mr. Rochester - and the mystery of Bertha - his mad wife, locked away in the North Tower. However, this story is only a minor plot line in comparison to the apparent 'epic' love story between Jane Eyre and Mr. Edward Rochester. In all honesty, Jane annoyed me; she has little depth, she never stands up for herself, she willingly allows herself to fall for a man who is rude, conceited and vain, who plays with her feelings when he pretends to be engaged to Blanche Ingram; a wealthy, accomplished and beautiful lady of the county. She barely ever speaks and if she does it is in answer to direct questions. It is, to me at least, a story of little substance and action for most of the plot - the only action to be seen is the mysterious goings on of Bertha, setting fires at night and then Jane's exile to the Moors where she lays down to die after Rochester's betrayal. Possibly my favorite part of the novel is Jane's stay with the Rivers family, which is where, for the first time in her life, she is surrounded by truly happy people, who accept her as true family. She however, turns down an offer for marriage from Rev. Rivers (a perfectly lovely man I might add) to run back to Rochester who feels betrayed after her leaving.

All in all, Jane seems to do a lot of apologizing in this novel, despite the fact that she never actually does anything wrong, which is why I didn't really enjoy it.

Adaptation:

I ended up not watching the adaptation I said I would (the 2011 version with Michael Fassbender) but the 2006 version with Ruth Wilson as Jane and Toby Stephens as Mr. Rochester.

I really liked this adaptation, Wilson played her part well and put a face to "those eyes" so continually described by Rochester. Her face conveyed Jane's constant tumultuous thoughts, and her and Stephens had electrifying chemistry  especially in their witty dialogue - perfectly displaying the undercurrents of emotion of their relationship, and the romantic subtext between the words.

The cinematography was also just what you expect of a Bronte adaptation - dark, grey, bleak and cold - however there was a surprising amount of vivid colour, especially in the outdoor scenes in the spring time - conveying the 'blossoming' of their romance - I thought these scenes were nice, however frivolous and continually linked with flashbacks to Rochester's dark past, making the vivacity of the scene sometimes to juxtaposed.

However, I was hoping to have some more introspective moments from Jane - perhaps the thoughts we so easily see from the novel depicted in such ways as a diary entry (such as in 'Persuasion' where the introspective Anne's thoughts are heard as she writes), for those who have not read the book, Jane seems somewhat an enigma - when really she is the only honest character in the story.

Conclusion:

I give the novel a 5/10 and the adaptation a 6/10.

Thursday, 14 February 2013

On A Personal Note:

Over this weekend I am having family to come and visit so I won't be posting any huge reviews.

I will however, be watching the latest version of 'Jane Eyre' with Michael Fassbender as the infamous Mr. Rochester for my 'Austen and The Bronte's' literary module, so I shall have a small review of that tomorrow night.

This coming week I'll be reading 'Twelfth Night' by William Shakespeare, 'Jane Eyre' by Charlotte Bronte and 'The Shawl' by Cynthia Ozick

...SO MUCH READING TO DO!


Now, off to bed with 'Persuasion' again!

Night!

Em x


My Novel of The Month: 'Persuasion' - Jane Austen

My Novel of The Month:

'Persuasion' - Jane Austen:



I'm going to do a full review of 'Persuasion' later on this week, as I absolutely LOVE this novel. For now however, I will just tell you that if you're a fan of Austen and have not read this book yet - you need to. In my opinion, it is her greatest literary achievement - Captain Wentworth is by far the best Austinian hero, his letter at the end of the novel confessing his love for Anne Elliot...breathtaking. You shall be swooning over him I'm sure!

If you are particular fans of Austen Adaptations, such as the Keira Knightly 'Pride and Prejudice, I suggest the brilliant 2007 version with Sally Hawkins and Rupert Penry-Jones (who makes a dashing Wentworth!).

Enjoy!

Em x

PS. Here is a cheeky picture of my favorite Captain Wentworth:



(...I know right?)

'Sophie's Choice' - William Styron

The Plot: 

'Sophie's Choice' centers around the summer of 1947, where young, aspiring writer Stingo, leaves his family home in North Carolina and moves to a cheap boarding house in Brooklyn, New York. There, he meets the ingenious Nathan Landau and his beautiful Polish lover Sophie Zawistowska, who are involved in a difficult, yet passionate relationship. The story looks into the dark pasts of the three characters; Stingo's familial ties to slavery, Nathan's struggle with mental illness and Sophie's devastating experience in the concentration camps and her story of being a Holocaust survivor.

My Thoughts:

I tried to not give too much away in the introduction to my discussion about this novel, as it is filled with surprises and many plot twists that should be discovered on the page than on my blog!

This really is an excellent novel, and is filled with both emotional, and historic renditions of what it means to be a survivor of the Holocaust, along with critical analysis of ideology, faith, memory and most importantly guilt. This is a novel consumed with guilt and lies, even the narration itself is dubious, which gives the reader the task of deciding for themselves what is truth and what is not - you are not simply complicit in the character's stories.

The Holocaust is a huge and exceedingly controversial topic to undergo, which Styron is only too aware considering the themes and technical discourses used throughout the novel. Holocaust literature is no rare thing in 2013 - stories of survivors grace the best-sellers stacks in every book shop, however, this novel was written in 1979 - in a time when the Holocaust was very much a taboo subject, and people were still coming to grips with the atrocities committed in Europe throughout WWII. It is this awareness of the topics importance that drives the story - the important notion of the 'choices' made throughout this time, and the choices made after it - defining not only those who lived through the horror of the Holocaust - but those who will live after it - the 'survivors', the rest of the world. The thing that gets you through the novel is Sophie's story - her background and history of living in Poland to her terrible ordeal in the concentration camps - leading up to the climactic moment of her 'choice' on entering Auschwitz.

The characters themselves, although perhaps a little stereotypical (however this does help with the characterization), are fully formed, each with their own riveting  and tragic back story.  There are moments of profound sadness, as well as revelation and the occasional comic line, however, the story is very much introverted into the mind of Stingo; who, like the reader is struggling to understand the relationship between the lovers and how they managed to become so broken. It is, in this sense a narrative of discovery, as every few chapters, a new revelation about Nathan and Sophie is unveiled  adding a new twist to their tragic tale.

However, there are problems with this text.  It has a huge scope, and covers many social, racial and historical themes and contexts, which, I believe, is the crux of the story - there is just too much to unpick. It feels like Styron wanted to write three different novels, but ended up blending them all together to create one huge moral circus, not knowing which ideological viewpoint it comes from. My main quarrel with the book is how the story does not stand up to the title  - 'Sophie's Choice'. The story is told completely from Stingo's point of view, in retrospect - giving the reader due justification to find the narrative scrupulous. He tells us throughout that he was 'privileged' to have been the only one to talk to Sophie about her time in Auschwitz and that it was a topic never broached or understood by her lover Nathan, convincing us of his truthfulness, however, this is where the story falls short. Despite her name being in the title, her story is dominated by men - she is abused and controlled by Nathan, she was victimized by the patriarchal system of Nazism, by her father and most evidently, by Stingo - taking her story and using it to form his own. It is this duplicitous nature of the novel that threw me - I thought it was going to be a story of what it meant to be a woman in the Holocaust - however, we never know what Sophie is thinking, we can never trust her speech as it is all told by a man, a young, naive, American man, who did not experience the Holocaust, nor understands it.

I have other scruples with the novel too; for example the comparison made by the writer between Slavery and the treatment of African-Americans in the South to the near abolition of the Jews in the Holocaust. Like I said before, it is as if he could not decide whether he wanted to write about one, or the other, so he writes about both - and decidedly too - Styron seems to be screaming out the question to his readers - can you compare these? Ultimately, I have to say 'no' - I do not believe that you can compare Slavery in the US to the concentration camps of Europe - they are two different atrocities that, yes, do correlate on a human and emotional level, however, I think too much time is dedicated to this in the form of melancholic postulation, not only by Stingo, but all the characters.

Conclusion:

I would rate this novel as a 6/10 - if you have the time to read it (as it is a hefty 632 pages!) then it is worth doing. It offers a unique perspective on the Holocaust and raises all sorts of philosophical, social and moral questions relating to, not only what it means to live in a world Post-Holocaust, but to questions of power in society, race, gender and historic relations.

If you would like to ask me any questions about 'Sophie's Choice', or would like to discuss the novel in any way, feel free to send me an email!

Happy reading!

Em x

An Introduction


Hello,

My name is Emily and I am here to talk to you about books. I am a profound reader of books - so much so that I made the choice of studying them (namely novels) at university - making myself wholly unemployable in the process!

Nonetheless, in this space I shall be discussing some of my most recent reads, mainly through the novels I have been reading and discussing in my classes, but some other, more popular fiction as well.

If, dear readers, you have any suggestions for new books I could be reading or any questions or discussion topics, please feel free to drop me an email

All the best!

Em x