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English, Scottish, & Welsh Fiction, Women's Fiction, Politics & Social Issues - Fiction, Literary Styles & Movements - Fiction
Agnes Grey by Anne Brontd — book cover

Agnes Grey

by Anne Brontd
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Overview

Concerned for her family’s financial welfare and eager to expand her own horizons, Agnes Grey takes up the position of governess, the only respectable employment for an unmarried woman in the nineteenth century. Unfortunately, Agnes cannot anticipate the hardship, humiliation, and loneliness that await her in the brutish Bloomfield and haughty Murray households. Drawn from Anne Brontë’s own experiences, Agnes Grey depicts the harsh conditions and class snobbery that governesses were often forced to endure. As Barbara A. Suess writes in her Introduction, “Brontë provides a portrait of the governess that is as sympathetic as her fictional indictment of the shallow, selfish moneyed class is biting.”

About the Author, Anne Brontd

Barbara A. Suess, assistant professor of English at William Patterson University, is the co-editor of New Approaches to the Literary Art of Anne Brontë and the author of Progress and Identity in the Plays of W. B. Yeats, 1892–1907.

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Book Details

Published
July 16, 2009
Publisher
ReadHowYouWant
ISBN
9781442940840

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