In searching for books about and set in Scotland, The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, by Muriel Spark, was on virtually every list I encountered and since I had not yet read it, I did.
Set in Edinburgh in the 1930s and published in 1962, The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie surprised me in how much I disliked it while I was reading it but came to like it later, while I was trying to figure out what to say about it.
Synopsis: Jean Brodie is a forty-something attractive, single teacher at a girls school in Edinburgh. She teaches the middle grade girls--the 11–13-year-olds. She is unconventional in that she doesn't drill her class on the fundamentals but rather wants to instill in them an appreciation and understanding of what she considers high culture and art--classical music, poetry, classical literature, Renaissance art. She selects a set of girls from her class to become her favorites, "her set," and she takes them to concerts and other outings, including tea in her flat.
The school administration disapproves of Miss Brodie's approach to teaching and the fact that she has a set of girls who are loyal to her even as they age out of her classes and move to the senior school. The head mistress tries for years to figure out how to get Miss Brodie to "retire early" and tries to get girls from her set to "betray" her by sharing secrets about her sex life. All the girls know that she is in love with a married man, the art teacher, but having an affair with a single man, the music teacher. The girls never bow to the headmistress's pressure to spill what they know. However, one girl does tell the headmistress that Miss Brodie admires the fascists who are gaining power in Italy and Germany, and that is all the headmistress needs to finally boot Miss Brodie from the school.
I started this book assuming that I would like Jean Brodie and feel awful for the way she was treated. This was not the case. I disliked Miss Brodie intensely--she is arrogant, self-satisfied, selfish, vain, and manipulative. As a teacher, she cared not about actually helping her students but in having them do well in order to make her shine all the brighter. Her love for Mussolini and Hitler and her admiration for their Black Shirts and Brown Shirts was repulsive. She talks about being in her prime--that is, she is at the peak of her beauty, knowledge, intellectual prowess and she is gracing her students with her gifts while she is in her prime.
The writing was interesting in that the narrator never gets us inside Miss Brodie's head, but rather we see what she does and says, often second hand, not what she thinks.
The narrator pegs or labels each of the girls based on Miss Brodie's assessment, and they are stuck with those labels: Eunice was athletic, Jenny was theatrical, Mary was stupid, Monica was known for sex, Rose was beautiful, and Sandy had "little piggy eyes" and fantasized a lot, living out stories in her head. And the narrator repeated these descriptions often, reminding me of the "wine-dark sea" of the Iliad and the Odyssey. These girls were reduced to the labels Miss Brodie attached to them, and in the novel they never have a life apart from the label, except for Sandy who becomes the "one who betrayed her."
When I finished the book, I gave it three stars. After thinking about it for a while, I've upped my rating to four stars. The book is not really about Miss Jean Brodie and the Scottish or Edinburgh school system. It is an allegory for how charismatic leaders can create loyal followers who will blindly support them even when they are shown to be less than perfect.
Written thirty years after the rise of fascism in Europe and almost twenty years after WWII ended, it seems to be an attempt to demonstrate how easily a fascist leader like Mussolini or Hitler could convince seemingly reasonable and rational people to do heinous things.
It is a sobering tale, relevant now in the US like never before. Not a fun book to read, but a powerful message. Maybe it is a five-star book after all.
I've never seen the movie, starring Maggie Smith. I wonder how true to the book it is.


This is an excellent review, Jane! I also disliked Miss Brodie, rated the book 3 stars, and never gave it another thought. It's been 15 years, and you've make me want to revisit this novel. I'd forgotten it was set in Scotland!
ReplyDeleteIt was interesting to read. Not necessarily fun, but interesting.
DeleteVery interesting take on this book! It's always been about narcissism, manipulation of the young, and the misuse of charisma, favoring some girls extravagantly and excluding others. But you are right--Spark connects her character to history through the dictators she admired, and this could be the whole point of the novel!
ReplyDeleteMaggie Smith's portrayal is famously brilliant, but I also recommend Geraldine McEwan's in a televised miniseries which I saw on PBS years ago.
Thanks for the two recommendations, Lucy. Not sure when I'll feel motivated to watch but good to know there are decent adaptations.
DeleteI struggled with this book because I didn't like Miss Brodie at all, and I think I was hoping for something lighter and funnier. But this book is definitely not funny. It's my least favorite of Spark's novels. But looking at it as an allegory about charismatic leaders and thinking about the time period she wrote it in makes me appreciate it a little more. So thank you for your insights!
ReplyDeleteLighter and funnier would definitely have made reading this more enjoyable. I think Miss Brodie was singularly humorless.
DeleteReally great review and I have seen snippets of tne movie and from what I have seen Maggie Smith and Pamela Franklin did an excellent job. Your review stresses how dangerous Miss Brodie was to her students and from what I saw of the movie I felt it stemmed from the fact that Brodie was very unhappy and in denial about how her own life was going.
ReplyDeleteThe dangerous aspect of Miss Brodie was never something I picked up on before I read the book.
DeleteI read this several years ago, and I had to read my own review to remember what I thought (you commented btw :) ) We had similar reactions. I didn't like Miss Brodie...she is dangerous. And I believe that is what Spark intended. It was a good piece of writing. I also settled on 4 stars, once I forced my self to not judge the book by its main character. (I'm glad I didn't permanently dissuade you from reading this.)
ReplyDeleteI had to go and reread your post and my comment. I agree that we can like a book and value it without liking the main character.
DeleteYou captured a lot of what I was thinking about Miss Brodie but I also disliked the girls. Plus, although I did not like Miss Brodie, I found it creepy that someone who seemed to be so independent was acting as the unpaid wife to the music teacher, then (of course) gets dumped for a younger woman. The art teacher was also repellent and she should never have created a situation where the girls were going to his studio unchaperoned. However, it was a good book for discussion!
ReplyDeleteI think with regards to the both the music teacher and the art teacher, the allegory of fascism holds up. The music teacher was lulled into acceptance of Miss B, who clearly didn't love him and didn't actually want to marry him, and he finally threw her off for someone who did. The art teacher and his wife were definitely creepy--he preyed on the students and the wife turned a blind eye.
DeleteI tried to read this one once, but put it down. That was years ago. Maybe I should try it again...
ReplyDeleteIt is a short book, but there are so many wonderful books out there, unless you're really motivated to read this one. It is not on my reread list, for sure!!!
DeleteGreat review. I had planned to read this classic this year -- and I guess as you say it might be relevant to our times. Perhaps Spark & her writing could give us a clue why 77 mil voted for the person in office now. But I will never understand or forgive it. lol.
ReplyDeleteJane, I recently reviewed The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie also. Susan at The Cue Code pointed me to your review. I had a really hard time reviewing it. My thoughts on the book were similar to yours, and I admire how well you expressed your views on it. I do hope to read more books by Muriel Spark to see what I think.
ReplyDelete