Villette by Charlotte Brontë
Villette by Charlotte Brontë

Literary fiction · 1853

Villette review

by Charlotte Brontë

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The verdict

Villette is Charlotte Brontë's final and most autobiographical novel, narrated by Lucy Snowe, an Englishwoman who travels alone to the fictional Belgian city of Villette after an unspecified catastrophe has stripped her of family, home, and prospects.

Best for curious readers in the genre. Reading time: 13h 0m.

Villette by Charlotte Brontë
Villette by Charlotte Brontë

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What it argues

Villette is Charlotte Brontë's final and most autobiographical novel, narrated by Lucy Snowe, an Englishwoman who travels alone to the fictional Belgian city of Villette after an unspecified catastrophe has stripped her of family, home, and prospects. She finds work as a teacher at a girls' boarding school run by the formidable Madame Beck and spends most of the novel in a state of compressed, tightly observed solitude — watching others, suppressing her own desires, and conducting an interior life far richer than the life she is allowed to live outwardly.

The novel's real subject is not plot but consciousness. Lucy Snowe is an unreliable narrator not out of deception but out of self-protection; she withholds information from the reader as she withholds emotion from the characters around her. Brontë is doing something formally sophisticated: showing us a woman who has internalized repression so thoroughly that she cannot trust her own emotional life, let alone express it. The famous long-withheld revelation about the identity of Dr. John is less a twist than a demonstration of how Lucy survives — by not fully inhabiting her own experience.

What it gets right

  1. 1.

    Lucy Snowe's withholding narration is the novel's formal argument: a woman so thoroughly trained in self-suppression that she cannot even grant herself a complete first-person account of her own life.

  2. 2.

    Villette anticipates modernist stream-of-consciousness by fifty years — Brontë is working out how to render interiority in a form that Victorian plot machinery wasn't designed for.

  3. 3.

    The Dr. John revelation is Brontë's most discussed formal choice: Lucy knows the reader knows, but Lucy chooses not to say. This is not a trick but a characterization.

What it covers

Who wrote it

Charlotte Brontë (1816–1855) was an English novelist and poet, the eldest of the three Brontë sisters whose work transformed Victorian fiction. Her first published novel, Jane Eyre (1847), brought immediate success and remains one of the best-known novels in the English language. Villette (1853) drew heavily on her own experience teaching in Brussels in the early 1840s and is considered her most psychologically sophisticated work. She published under the pseudonym Currer Bell until her identity became known. She died at thirty-eight, reportedly of complications from pregnancy.

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