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Contextualising Anne Brontë’s Agnes Grey: Religion and Social Reform -…
Contextualising Anne Brontë’s
Agnes Grey
:
Religion and Social Reform
Chapter One: Anne Brontë: A reappraisal
Part I: Literature Review of Previous Criticism:
1- Reception of Anne Brontë’s Work at the Time of Publication:
2- Neglecting Anne Brontë’s Work and Widespread Misconceptions:
3- Works about Anne Brontë Perpetuating the Belittling Perception: First Half of the 20th Century until the 1970s:
4- Wave of Reassessment and Reappraisal:
Part II: Sisterly Relations (Questions of Collaboration, Influence and Individuality):
1- Anne and Charlotte: Charlotte Brontë’s Role in Setting the Stage for the Perception of Anne’s work:
2- Anne and Emily: Twins, Gondal, Anne’s Independence:
3- Anne’s Criticism of her Sisters’ Works:
4- Anne’s
Agnes Grey
’s Influence on Charlotte’s
Jane Eyre
:
Part III: Literary Achievement:
1- The Misconception that Anne Simply Replicated her Life in Fiction:
2- Anne’s Individuality, Sense of Independence and Unique Identity:
Chapter Two: Anne Brontë’s religious convictions in
Agnes Grey
Part I - Anne Brontë’s Religious Development Journey
3- Religion and spirituality in Anne Brontë’s Works
1- Religion at the Time (Denominations, the Theological landscape)
2- Anne Brontë’s Spiritual Development
Part II - Depiction of religion in
Agnes Grey
1- The spiritual development of Agnes Grey
■ 3- Role of Agnes’s religious convictions in building her relation with and conduct towards others around her, Agnes’s religious convictions as governess
■ 1- How Anne conveys her beliefs through Agnes
■ 2- The role of the spiritual part of Agnes’s journey, Divine love in Agnes’s life.
■ 3- The Role of Religion in the Upbringing of Children
2- The Clergymen in
Agnes Grey
Chapter Three: Anne Brontë’s Social Criticism in
Agnes Grey
Class dynamics: the Plight of the Governess
Education
Issues in the Domestic Sphere