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Emily Bront's "Wuthering Heights"


# 51040
Emily Bront's "Wuthering Heights"
This paper discusses Emily Bront's "Wuthering Heights", a novel demonstrating fragmentation through separation.
1,430 words (approx. 5.7 pages) | 1 source | MLA | 2004 United States


Paper Summary:

This paper explains that Emily Bront's novel, "Wuthering Heights", is a work of contrasts, such as masculine versus feminine, the introvert versus the extrovert, and power over passivity. The author points out that the female desiring power in a patriarchal environment contrasts sharply with a male's desire for the civilizing effect of culture. The paper relates, in detail, the portrayal of Catherine and Heathcliff as two sides of one being, which assists the reader in the discovery that "Wuthering Heights" is not a love story in the usual style.

From the Paper:

"Heathcliff's side is introversion. From the point of his introduction into the Height's household, the boy is described as gibbering and unable to communicate. From this can be seen that the boy, however objectionable, is isolated. His initial treatment at the hands of Mrs. Earnshaw and the children heightens this isolation, and he becomes ostracized. Even Nelly Dean, the servant, refers to the child as "it" and describes him as a "sullen, patient child" (22). Heathcliff doesn't seem to react to either emotional or physical bullying. Hindley repeatedly attacks him, but Heathcliff does not react. Rather he internalizes his reactions. He is pushed under the hooves of a horse and bears this with silence and coolness. Nelly mistakenly reads this reaction as being proof that the child is not vindictive, but later finds this not to be the case (23). The child has internalized and introverted his anger, not in order to diffuse it, but to store and hone it for later use."

Cite this paper

APA Citation:

Emily Bront's "Wuthering Heights" (2012, January 15). Retrieved February 09, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Book-Review-Emily-Bront's-Wuthering-Heights/51040

MLA Citation:

"Emily Bront's "Wuthering Heights"" 15 January 2012. Web. 09 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.com/Book-Review-Emily-Bront's-Wuthering-Heights/51040>




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Yobette US
Publisher Since:
Aug 12, 2001
I graduated with Honors and a GPA of 3.73. I won awards for both fiction and non-fiction and made the Dean's list for three out of four years. I am currently a graduate student.
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