Newsnight Review discussed a newly discovered novella by Charlotte Bronte.
(Edited highlights of the panel's review)
MARK LAWSON:
Jeanette,
it's being publicised as a great literary find.
Is it?
JEANETTE WINTERSON:
No, it isn't. It can't be a classic because it
was only published today, and classics
have to stand the test of time. We need
more than 12 hours. It's the minutiae. It
will give academics something to do for
the next 20 years. For the reader, it doesn't
give us a fresh way into the work. It's
certainly not Jane Eyre. I wouldn't go out
and buy it.
LAWSON:
We have to say, they are making huge
claims on this. They say "wittier and more
ironic than anything published in her
lifetime." It's spin.
WINTERSON:
They have to say that. I was spoken to by a
literary editor saying the phone has been
jammed all day. It's hit the market right.
It's not about literature. It's about
promotion.
EKOW ESHUN:
Man, I loved it. Such a nice boy!
LAWSON:
Was this your first Charlotte Bronte
experience?
ESHUN:
Yes, it was! It seemed modern
and cinematic. It's taken in excerpts, quite
short bits. It read like a screenplay. It's
seen through the eyes of a foppish dandy.
He sees the world through gestures, signs,
fashions. He talks about how he spends
half an hour dressing in front of the mirror,
and then another half an hour looking at
himself in the mirror. I loved the way that
all of this world is described through detail
and gesture. There is a great scene, near the
ends of this, when the duke, who is the
monarch of this kingdom, faces a riot. All
the rude mechanicals of the state waving
their pitch forks in his face. The dandy is
describing the scene and describes how the
duke stands up and pushes his hand
through his hair. That gesture alone stills
the riot before him. The Duke has so much
power that he doesn't have to do very
much. But because it's a dandy describing
that scene...
WINTERSON:
But it's not well written.
ESHUN:
You see it through gesture. I love the way
all of this comes through in visual,
cinematic moments.
PAUL MORLEY:
I thought it might have been Ruby Wax
locked away in a room for a few days and
she's delivered this. It's interesting to see an
imagination coalesce into what it became
with Jane Eyre. Then I dipped in again and
I got carried away. There was an example
of supernatural, divine imagination
coalescing into something. You see
surrealism, and jazz before Charlie Parker.
I am getting carried away.
LAWSON:
Come on. Curiously, books were often
more cinematic before cinema than they
are now.
MORLEY:
It's not surprising unless you are coming in
from a virginal angle.
ESHUN:
Because it seems to be outside the social
construct, outside Victorian life, it
becomes a thing of pure pleasure, because
it's not about realism any more.
WINTERSON:
There's a fairy tale side of it. Didn't any of
these sentences bother you?
MORLEY:
Yes. Then I forgave it because it was 120
years ago and she was only 23.
LAWSON:
If this had been found in a drawer and
simply said, "A novel by a lady", it
wouldn't be published.
MORLEY:
But you would have been puzzled by the
hallucinatory nature of it, as if they were
on opium.
ESHUN:
I agree. There is a weird science fiction
quality to it.
MORLEY:
Jefferson Aeroplane discovered this before a
whole album was made about it.
LAWSON:
Some people are going to be very
surprised.
MORLEY:
It's Ruby Wax, ahead of her time!
WINTERSON:
Are we sure this isn't a Red Nose Day
joke?!
LAWSON:
We don't think it is, but as Jeanette says,
they have published it rather evocatively in
Penguin Classics.