Ambiguity in Charlotte Brontë’s Villette von Olga Springer | ISBN 9783847111191

Ambiguity in Charlotte Brontë’s Villette

von Olga Springer
Buchcover Ambiguity in Charlotte Brontë’s Villette | Olga Springer | EAN 9783847111191 | ISBN 3-8471-1119-1 | ISBN 978-3-8471-1119-1
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Ambiguity in Charlotte Brontë’s Villette

von Olga Springer
Charlotte Brontë’s final novel Villette (1853) is associated with ambiguity because of its open ending: Does M. Paul return to narrator-protagonist Lucy Snowe or is he killed in a storm raging on the Atlantic? Taking its famous ending as a starting point, this study explores Villette as a text in which ambiguity is all-pervasive in various ways. Among these is the narrator’s ambivalent attitude toward herself and others, epitomised in her stylistic idiosyncrasies. The links between ambiguity and doubt are explored through an analysis of Lucy’s signature phrase, “I know not,” expressive of her existential doubts and questioning attitude toward the world. The analysis moreover focuses on the motif of the oracle as a traditionally ambiguous utterance, and explores its relevance in the context of the generic tradition of Villette as a fictional autobiography. Another focus is the interplay of figurative and literal levels of meaning in the allegorical episodes, creating ambiguity.