The ‘plain’ Victorian woman

There are no future dates

An online talk from the Brontë Parsonage Museum

This is a past event.

An online talk from the Brontë Parsonage Museum

Join us for an online version of our Thursday Talk, discussing how Charlotte Brontë perceived her physical appearance, and how this corresponded with wider cultural discourses of beauty in early Victorian Britain

Something almost repulsive

Most accounts of Charlotte explicitly describe her as 'plain', with Charlotte herself being much more negative about her appearance. We know her to have been incredibly self-conscious about the way she looked, believing herself to be ‘ugly’ and ‘obscure’.

The self-constructed label of ugliness seeped into every aspect of Charlotte's person-hood, significantly by way of internal narratives of rejection. Charlotte used harsh language when referring to her physical appearance, calling herself ‘the most stupid little wretch that ever existed’ and ‘the weakest - puniest - least promising of [my father’s] six children’, to offer but two examples.

This talk will be delivered by special guest Eve Ellis (MA History, University of Edinburgh), who will draw on her dissertation research to explore this theme in Charlotte’s writing.
Tickets: £5
Date: Thursday 13 July, 7.30pm (GMT)

This online event will take place via Zoom. This is a live event and will not be recorded.

This is an online event delivered via Zoom. Want to join person? We will be running an in-person version of this Thursday Talk at the Museum the very same day. Find out more.
read more
‹‹ Back to What's On