Friday, November 8, 2019
Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte essays
Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte essays    Wuthering Heights opens as a diary; according to Steinitz (2000), this     serves as a means to establish a frame through which the story can be told.      Steinitz also suggests that Bronte uses a personal diary to "articulate     her preoccupation with space by locating all of her family members     precisely" (Steinitz, 2000:1). She notes the exact positioning for example     of her sister Anne's foot on the floor; likewise her character Catherine     uses a diary not to place people, but rather as a means to detail a "series     of struggles which replace emplacement with displacement" (Steinitz,     2000:1).  The work goes on to discuss the displacement of a series of     characters including the narrator, who rambles from time to time and seems     to suffer from an "anxiety of place;"  Lockwood, the narrator obviously     uses the diary as a method of discourse, but also as a means perhaps to     search for a space to put himself (Steinitz, 2000:1).  These ideas are     perhaps reflective of Ms. Bronte's own desire to find a place for herself.     According to Gaskell (1857) Bronte's earliest years were passed amidst     "peculiar forms of population and society" (p.9) whose impressions made     upon her early life influenced her writing, including that in Wuthering     Heights.  Gaskell goes on to say that Bronte's observations of the     "peculiar force of character which the Yorkshirement display" are evidenced     in many of her characters, particularly Joseph in Wuthering Heights.     Joseph is an individual that rarely requires the assistance of other; yet     comes to depend upon them; he might be considered a member of the "short-     sighted class" whose feelings are not easily roused, but "their duration is     The characters in Bronte's Wuthering heights, primarily Heathcliff and     Catherine Earnshaw, have been described as "psychologically strange" yet     intelligible (Levy, 1996:1).  Joyce Carol Oates commented that    ...     
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