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    One of the themes of Wuthering Heights is cruelty and it’s circular nature. Throughout the novel, cruelty is inflicted by many characters, and experienced by many more. Oftentimes, the dynamic shifts, and a character who once acted cruelly in the first half of the novel finds themselves being subjected to that very same cruelty at their lowest moments. At times, it seems that even the moors where the novel takes place exude a hostile and unwelcoming attitude. At the center of all the cruelty…

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    Revenge is a common theme in Wuthering Heights. Revenge is the act of hurting or harming somebody for something he or she has previously done. Most people normally look at revenge as a negative act towards other people. A character that is extremely cruel to many people because of his past is Heathcliff. Heathcliff seeks revenge on anyone for his or her previous actions towards him. This makes him a brutal and a melancholy character as a result of his destructive revenge. One can see this when…

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    In Wuthering Heights, Emily Brontë shows that the characters seek revenge on people that have pained them physically and emotionally by Heathcliff trying to get back at the Lintons and Hindley. Heathcliff, a mischievous man, seeks revenge on Edgar Linton after Catherine died of an illness. He also wanted to pursue revenge on Hindley and young Catherine for giving Heathcliff troubles in his life. Hindley, Catherine's brother, seeks revenge on Heathcliff for becoming the favorite child of Mr.…

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    1. pg 2 Wuthering Heights is a dynamic dwelling. As mentioned by Mr. Lockwood, the home experiences harsh weather conditions, which is why the name fits it perfectly. Lockwood 's description implies how he believes it is against humans and not welcoming. He was not graciously invited in and had a multitude of conflicts once he set foot in the premises. 2. pg. 3 Lockwood provides insight into the ambiguous nature of Heathcliff. The new houseguest reveals how Heathcliff does not fit in, as he is…

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    Wuthering Heights explores a variety of kinds of love, the main focus being Heathcliff and Catherine 's heated passion for each other, which is terribly destructive because of their intense connection. Catherine and Heathcliff’s relationship can be viewed to consist of conventional love rather than affected love in a contemporary society because conventional love is described as genuine, caring and forgiving, which are attributes displayed by both characters. However, the novel is set in the…

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    others. In Coky Giedroyc’s adaptation of Wuthering Heights, Emily Bronte’s characters are hurt and destroyed in order for significant ideas to be conveyed, making it a more effective text as audiences are able to understand ideas that may not be in plain sight. Wuthering Heights is set during the Victorian Era and centres around Cathy and Heathcliff 's developing romance and the involvement of the people around them in it. The main idea in Wuthering Heights is the clash of elemental forces,…

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    to create symbolic figures that the reader often catches, but it represents something totally different for everyone. The novel Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte can be characterized as Gothic Fiction with a hint of Romanticism, and the Victorian Ideal. The novel centers around a “gypsy” like kid named Heathcliff, who is adopted and raised in Wuthering Heights, where he endures pain through abuse, the ideas of revenge and casting it on others, and finds love but then loses it and makes another…

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    The central point of this story is mostly about Catharine 's and Heathcliff 's admiration for each other which turn out distasteful. At a young age, Heathcliff had been adopted by Mr. Earnshaw, who was at the time owner of a farmer of ‘Wuthering Heights. ' During that period, Heathcliff grew up with Earnshaw’s children, and including Catherine’s and Hindley’s. Also, Catherine fell in love with Heathcliff, but Hindley was jealous of Heathcliff’s close relationship with his adopted parent (Mr.…

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    Younger Heathcliff vs. Older Heathcliff Wuthering Heights is a novel written by Emily Brontë, published in the year 1847. Wuthering Heights – a farmhouse – is the location of where the novel is set, along with the property of the Lintons, Thrushcross Grange. The main themes in the novel are jealousy (caused by love) and vengeance. There is an ongoing feud between two families, the Earnshaws and the Lintons over the inheritance of property. In Wuthering Heights, one of the main characters is…

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    People are complex beings, not only predictable, but at times also unpredictable; no one knows what someone might do. In Emily Bronte’s chilling novel Wuthering Heights, she has managed to create a character that suffers the consequences for the revenge he plots in the name of love, and for power over those who treated him as if he were worth nothing. Heathcliff’s evolution into a man who thrives on the destruction of other people’s happiness suffers along with those he destroys, creating a life…

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