Emo Classics – Bronte, Woolf, and Kierkegaard

By a confluence of circumstances, I find myself in the middle of three books whose authors would probably have a great deal to say to each other, though they lived either in different time periods or different places (Charlotte and Soren both died in the year 1855, 38 and 42 respectively).

Mrs Dalloway is, ostensibly, about a lady getting ready for a party, but the 3rd person perspective follows a number of different characters, including one suffering from shell shock and two others from a broken heart. Villette is a surprisingly modern novel about a young woman dealing with depression in a foreign country. And The Sickness unto Death opens with a lengthy (often impenetrable) analysis of despair, with some barely veiled reactions to Hegel.

While this busy month hasn’t been the ideal time for reading these kinds of books, it is always interesting when one’s reading choices come together thematically. I don’t think Woolf and Bronte are usually categorized as existentialists in the way that Kierkegaard and Dostoyevsky are, but I see a lot of the same questions and struggles in these women’s works, with Mrs Dalloway holding undercurrents of “to be, or not to be” and Villette exploring the tension between who Lucy might be and what she hide behinds (Kierkegaard would have a great deal to say about this, I think).

It was my intention to finish all three books by Easter—this is unlikely. These are very slow and weighty reads. 😉



2 responses to “Emo Classics – Bronte, Woolf, and Kierkegaard”

  1. Mrs Dalloway is on my ‘List’. I read ‘The Voyage Out’ a while back and enjoyed it. Funnily Mrs Dalloway was a character in that & she seemed like an interesting person/character. My ‘plan’ is to read Woolf’s work in publication order (to see how her style progressed) so it’ll be a while till I get to ‘Dalloway’.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Ooh, I am a big fan of recurring characters that aren’t part of a “series” (Flannery O’Connor does this in her books as well). Makes them feel more like real people 🙂

      I think it’s a good idea to read her books in order… I have been reading them in a hodgepodge order (though largely in reverse publication), and my experience with Mrs Dalloway may be suffering for comparison with her later books. That being said, different novels resonate with different folks. You’re in for a treat either way!

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Hi, I’m Marian—I talk about classics, history, and other books on this blog, as well as on YouTube.

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