
Viac o knihe
Charlotte Brontë's final masterpiece powerfully portrays a woman struggling to reconcile love, jealousy, and a fierce desire for independence. Having fled a harrowing past in England, Lucy Snowe begins a new life teaching at a boarding school in the great capital of a foreign country. There, as she tries to achieve independence from both outer necessity and inward grief, she finds that her feelings for a worldly doctor and a dictatorial professor threaten her hard-won self-possession. Published in 1853, Charlotte Bronte's last novel was written in the wake of her grief at the death of her siblings. It has a dramatic force comparable to that of her other masterpiece, Jane Eyre, as well as a striking modernity of psychological insight and a revolutionary understanding of human loneliness.
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- Titul
- Villette
- Jazyk
- anglicky
- Autori
- Charlotte Brontëová
- Vydavateľ
- Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
- Rok vydania
- 2009
- Počet strán
- 657
- ISBN10
- 0307455564
- ISBN13
- 9780307455567
- Série
- Štítky
- Beletria, Fantasy, Historické romány, Náboženské témy, Klasika, Láska, Ženy, Priateľstvo, Francúzsko, Škola, Britská literatúra, Úmrtia, 19. storočie, Anglicko, Darčeky pre mužov, Veľká Británia, Anglická literatúra, Londýn, Osamelosť, Učitelia, učiteľky, Muži, Výchova a vzdelávanie, Ružový október
- Prvé vydanie
- 1853
- Pôvodný názov
- Villette
- Hodnotenie
- 3,8 z 5
- Anotácia
- Charlotte Brontë's final masterpiece powerfully portrays a woman struggling to reconcile love, jealousy, and a fierce desire for independence. Having fled a harrowing past in England, Lucy Snowe begins a new life teaching at a boarding school in the great capital of a foreign country. There, as she tries to achieve independence from both outer necessity and inward grief, she finds that her feelings for a worldly doctor and a dictatorial professor threaten her hard-won self-possession. Published in 1853, Charlotte Bronte's last novel was written in the wake of her grief at the death of her siblings. It has a dramatic force comparable to that of her other masterpiece, Jane Eyre, as well as a striking modernity of psychological insight and a revolutionary understanding of human loneliness.





















