Friday, September 23, 2011
Review: WIDE SARGASSO SEA by Jean Rhys
In Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre,
Bertha is the madwoman locked in the attic by her husband Rochester,
the simmering Englishman whose children Jane has been hired to tutor. In
Bronte's novel we learn little about Bertha other than that she's a
monster who must be bound with rope, a white woman from the Caribbean
whom Rochester was long ago pressured into marrying for her money. But
Rhys, who grew up in the French Caribbean colony of Dominica, presses on
the silences in Bronte to give Bertha her own story. Caliban does not
become Ariel here, but Rhys turns a menacing cipher into a grieving,
plausible young woman, and one whose story says whole worlds about
global mixtures, about the misunderstandings between the colonized, the
colonizers and the people who can't easily say which they are.
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