黑料社

Unfulfilled Expectations - the neglected classics we need to see

6 Apr 2023
Books and a camera on a shelf

鈥淲hat? Not again?鈥

That was the reaction many viewers will have expressed as the BBC launched its latest Sunday night drama Great Expectations.

The Beeb has had four cracks at the Dickens classic in the last 25 years.

The most recent BBC TV version was in 2011 when Gillian Anderson took the role of Miss Havisham (currently occupied by Olivia Colman). Just a year later BBC films co-produced a big screen version with Helena Bonham Carter as Miss Havisham.

Prior to those two takes on the classic, there was a 1999 incarnation starring Charlotte Rampling as Miss H and Ioan Gruffudd as Pip.

So, in a blog piece we have entitled Unfulfilled Expectations, some of the 黑料社鈥檚 Department of English and Creative Writing suggest some neglected novels which they would like to see brought to the screen鈥

 

The Life of Charlotta Du Pont

Professor of Eighteenth-Century English Chris Mounsey champions 1723鈥檚 The Life of Charlotta Du Pont, an English Lady: Taken from Her Own Memoirs by Penelope Aubin.

鈥淧enelope Aubin鈥檚 rip-roaring adventure novels were so famous in her day that she ended up as a one-woman comedy act, but the novels also took on serious issues, such as the developing slave trade and the treatment of women in marriage,鈥 says Chris. 

This rollicking tale describes how Charlotta was trepan鈥檇 (tricked) by her stepmother who had her kidnapped and sent to Virginia. On the way Charlotta鈥檚 ship is captured by Madagascan Pirates and then seized by a Spanish man-o-war.

The story follows her marriage and adventures in the Spanish West Indies before her return to England. Along the way Charlotta meets slaves and survivors of shipwrecks.

 鈥淧erhaps the most interesting gentleman and lady whom Charlotta meets is a biracial couple, Domingo and Isabinda, who are living in poverty until Charlotta helps them to move to St Domingue, where biracial marriages were legal,鈥 says Chris.

 The novel is available on the University鈥檚 Eighteenth-Century Collections Online. 

 

David Blaize

Associate lecturer Stan Booth, who admits to not being a Dickens fan, picks EF Bensons鈥 David Blaize, published in 1916.

The first book of a trilogy, it follows the life of the title character, looking at his relationships and actions as he ventures through prep school then public school.

鈥淕iven the exploration of themes such as sexual and emotional development of a young male, I would see it as a useful cultural tool for society in understanding male development particularly through the sexual development of David who later in the series realises his sexuality. Though God knows what the BBC would do to it!鈥 says Stan.

 

Parable of the Sower

Dr Matthew Leggatt, Senior Lecturer in English and American Literature, chooses Octavia E. Butler's Parable of the Sower.

鈥淏utler's novel is in many ways a literary precursor to Cormac McCarthy's much acclaimed 2006 The Road. It's just as gritty and given that the protagonist is a young African American woman who, for much of the text, must pose as a man in order to survive in a post-apocalyptic North America, the novel feels very of our moment,鈥 says Matthew.

Butler's work beginning to receive deserved recognition with a TV adaptation of her ground-breaking 1979 science fiction novel Kindred appearing last year.

And we might not have to wait long for an adaptation of Parable of the Sower with production company A24, which was responsible for this year's Oscar Best Picture winner Everything Everywhere All At Once, having picked up the rights.

 

Ulysses

Glenn Fosbraey, Head of English and Creative Writing, throws his weight behind James Joyce鈥檚 Ulysses, published in 1922.

鈥淥ften lauded, along with T.S. Eliot鈥檚 The Waste Land, as the pinnacle of modernist texts, James Joyce鈥檚 novel is often given the dubious honour of being the book most people start but never finish,鈥 says Glenn.

鈥淚t鈥檚 also a book which even the bravest of film and TV directors have avoided like鈥 well, like an adaptation of Ulysses. In fact, so off-putting is the job of adapting this masterpiece for screen, that Joseph Strick鈥檚 1967 undertaking remains the only significant attempt to date. But that doesn鈥檛 mean someone 蝉丑辞耻濒诲苍鈥檛 adapt it, and a lengthy TV serialisation - a la Twin Peaks: The Return, where David Lynch was allowed ample time to let the script breathe - could be the perfect format.

鈥淭丑别 Nighttown 鈥榚pisode鈥 of the novel is already scripted, so some of the work is done, right? Although some of the character鈥檚 ruder nicknames might not get past the censors.鈥

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