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Author Brontë, Anne, 1820-1849.

Title Agnes Grey / Anne Brontë ; edited by Robert Inglesfield and Hilda Marsden ; with an introduction and additional notes by Sally Shuttleworth
Published Oxford, UK : Oxford University Press, 2010

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Description 1 online resource (xxxviii, 193 pages)
Series Oxford world's classics
Oxford world's classics (Oxford University Press)
Contents Abbreviations used in this edition; Introduction; Note on the Text; Select Bibliography; A Chronology of Anne Bront?; AGNES GREY; Appendix: Biographical Notice of Ellis and Acton Bell; Explanatory Notes
Summary 'How delightful it would be to be a governess!'When the young Agnes Grey takes up her first post as governess she is full of hope; she believes she only has to remember'myself at their age'to win her pupils'love and trust. Instead she finds the young children she has to deal with completely unmanageable. They are, as she observes to her mother,'unimpressible, incomprehensible creatures'. In writing her first novel, Anne Brontë drew on her own experiences, and one can trace in the work many of the trials of the Victorian governess, often stranded far from home, and treated with little respect by her employers, yet expected to control and educate her young charges. Agnes Grey looks at childhood from nursery to adolescence, and it also charts the frustrations of romantic love, as Agnes starts to nurse warmer feelings towards the local curate, Mr Weston. The novel combines astute dissection of middle-class social behaviour and class attitudes with a wonderful study of Victorian responses to young children which has parallels with debates about education that continue to this day
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references
Notes Print version record
Subject Governesses -- Fiction
Single women -- Fiction
FICTION -- General.
Governesses
Single women
SUBJECT England -- Fiction
Subject England
Genre/Form Feminist fiction
Fiction
Form Electronic book
Author Inglesfield, Robert.
Marsden, Hilda.
Shuttleworth, Sally, 1952-
ISBN 9780191612565
0191612561
1283296756
9781283296755