Sunday, March 22, 2020
Wuthering Heights Essays (1680 words) - British Films,
  Wuthering Heights    In the novel Wuthering Heights, a story about love turned obsession, Emily    Bronte manipulates the desolate setting and dynamic characters to examine the  self-destructive pain of compulsion. Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights is a  novel about lives that cross paths and are intertwined with one another.    Healthcliff, a orphan, is taken in by Mr. Earnshaw, the owner of Wuthering    Heights. Mr. Earnshaw has two children named Catherine and Hindley. Jealousy  between Hindley and Healthcliff was always a problem. Catherine loves    Healthcliff, but Hindley hates the stranger for stealing his fathers affection  away. Catherine meets Edgar Linton, a young gentleman who lives at Thrushcross    Grange. Despite being in love with Healthcliff she marries Edgar elevating her  social standing. The characters in this novel are commingled in their  relationships with Wuthering Heights and Thrushcross Grange. The series of  events in Emily Bronte's early life psychologically set the tone for her  fictional novel Wuthering Heights. Early in her life while living in Haworth,  near the moors, her mother died. At the time she was only three. At the age of  nineteen, Emily moved to Halifax to attend Law Hill School. There is confusion  as of how long she stayed here, suggestions ranging from a minimum of three  months to a maximum of eighteen months. However long, it was here where she  discovered many of the ideas and themes used in Wuthering Heights. Halifax, just  like the Yorkshire moors of York, can be described as bleak, baron, and bare.    The moors are vast, rough grassland areas covered in small shrubbery. The  atmosphere that Emily Bronte encompassed herself in as a young adult, reflects  the setting she chose for Wuthering Heights. The setting used throughout the  novel Wuthering Heights, helps to set the mood to describe the characters. We  find two households separated by the cold, muddy, and barren moors, one by the  name of Wuthering Heights, and the other Thrushcross Grange. Each house stands  alone, in the mist of the dreary land, and the atmosphere creates a mood of  isolation. In Emily Bronte's novel Wuthering Heights, there are two places  where virtually all of the action takes place. These two places, Wuthering    Heights and Thrushcross Grange differ greatly in appearance and mood. These  differences reflect the universal conflict between storm and calm that Emily    Bronte develops as the theme in her novel Wuthering Heights. Wuthering Heights  and Thrushcross Grange both represent several opposing properties which bring  about all sorts of bad happenings when they clash. For example, the inhabitants  of Wuthering Heights were that of the working class, while those of Thrushcross    Grange were high up on the social ladder. The people of Wuthering Heights  aspired to be on the same level as the Lintons. This is evident by Heathcliff  and Catherine when the peek through their window. In addition, Wuthering Heights  was always in a state of storminess while Thrushcross Grange always seemed calm.    Wuthering Heights, and its surroundings, depicts the cold, dark, and evil side  of life. Bronte chooses well, the language that she uses in Wuthering Heights.    Even the title of her book holds meaning. "The very definition of the word  wuthering may be viewed as a premonitory indication of the mysterious happenings  to be experienced by those inhabiting the edifice."1 "Wuthering Heights,  built in 1500, suffers from a kind of malnutrition: its thorns have become  barren, its firs stunted, everything seems to crave for the ?alms of the  sun' that sustain life."2 This tenebrous home is decorated with crumbling  griffins over the front of the main door.3 Its lack of congeniality and"warmth is augmented by stone floors." 4 The windows are set deep in the  wall, and the corners defended with large jutting stones. Although Wuthering    Heights, the land of the storm, sits high on the barren moorland, "The world  of Wuthering Heights is a world of sadism, violence, and wanton cruelty."5 It  is the tenants of the Wuthering Heights that bring the storm to the house. The    Earnshaw family, including Heathcliff, grew up inflicting pain on one another.    Pinching, slapping and hair pulling occur constantly. Catherine, instead of  shaking her gently, wakes Nelly Dean, the servant of the house, up by pulling  her hair. The Earnshaw children grow up in a world "where human beings, like  the trees, grow gnarled and dwarfed and distorted by the inclement climate."6    Wuthering Heights is parallel to the life of Heathcliff. Both Heathcliff and    Wuthering Heights began as lovely and warm, and as time wore on both withered  away to become less of what they once were. Heathcliff is the very spirit of    Wuthering    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.