Characters in Wuthering Heights

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    The characters of Victor Frankenstein, from Frankenstein (Shelley, 1818), Heathcliff, from Wuthering Heights (Bronte, 1847), and Jay Gatsby, from The Great Gatsby, (Scott Fitzgerald, 1925) can be seen as tragic heroes. Each of these characters displays characteristics of a tragic hero, as outlined in Aristotle’s Poetics (1895). The characteristics, as well as characters that display them will be discussed. The first characteristic of a tragic hero is that the character evokes feelings of pity…

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    Heathcliff is a character from the novel, Wuthering Heights. This character faces many injustices in his life. This injustices made him grow as a person and created character. Therefore, life being unfair with him created the desire for him to make what he thought was just. First of all, the decision people make in life are in result of decisions they took in one point earlier in their life, whether they were the ideal decisions or not this changes people for the rest of their lives; this…

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    reader. While there are many ways to do this, grabbing the reader’s interest in the first chapter is essential. Jane Austen, Emily Bronte, and Charlotte Bronte use setting and character development in the first chapter of their books to spark the reader’s interest. Not only do each of these authors introduce the setting and characters well, they also present the relationships among them all. Emma, published in 1815, is set in Highbury, 16 miles from London. Austen gives the impression that not…

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    that Wuthering Heights charts the process of Catherine learning femininity as defined by her society and traces the difficulties she experiences as she enacts her role as an upper class woman and wife. Catherine is ultimately broken by the pressure of these contradictions and she goes mad, enacting her own self alienation right before…

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    How Is Heathcliff Selfish

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    disappointed with their outcomes. The main characters in Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights are victims of such negative, self indulgent attitudes and their pessimistic natures foreshadow their grim fates. Heathcliff and Cathy’s refusal to overcome their fatal flaws of selfishness and vengeance cause them to live in self-inflicted torment. Catherine’s selfishness in coveting an elevated rank in…

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    Aristotle Tragic Hero

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    occurred. Once upon a time, only men received the title of ‘tragic hero”. In modern times, female characters also possess the capability of receiving that title. Aristotle placed emphasis on nobility as a characteristic for tragic heroes. However, he also stated that characters depicted as tragic heroes also possess the characteristic of relatability. Arthur Miller pointed out that nobility prevents characters from obtaining relatability, resulting in tragic heroes now originating from all…

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    This era was a time in which society was dominated by males and social class rankings. Emily Brontë effectively conveys her feminist way of thinking and explains what women went through during the Victorian era in her novel, Wuthering Heights. Brontë uses the main character, Catherine, to reveal the unjust treatment of women during the Victorian era by portraying the lack of women 's rights, deficiencies in women’s education, and the dependency a woman had on marriage. It is made…

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    Both Wuthering Heights and As I Lay Dying feature dynamic father figures. Bronte introduces us to Hindley in Wuthering Heights, and Faulkner introduces us to Anse in As I Lay Dying. Though the two stories have different settings and genres, as well as being written in different places and literary movements, comparisons can be drawn between these main father figures easily. Both are portrayed in the beginning of the novels as unsavory antagonistic characters, despite being the head of their…

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    traditions as the Victorian girdling had constrained. The pathos of the Victorian novel is mostly based on a foundation-emotion of isolation and detachment, as the main persona Pip in Dickens’ Great Expectations (1861) is an orphan; and the parallel character of the jilted spinster Ms. Havisham likewise personifies isolation in that she lives apart in the jungled manor where hardly any visitors are accepted. Ms. Havisham’s eerie dress rehearsals with her worn-out bridal gown…

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    Emily Brontë was born in Yorkshire, England in 1818, where the setting of her novel, Wuthering Heights, is located. The moors in Yorkshire are personified within the novel as a bad place, brought up because of Brontë’s childhood growing up in the area. In addition, the town of Haworth, where Emily’s family moved soon after her birth, was seen as a very poor town, leaving all the children to play within the moors. Brontë always longed to be in the moors because of the sense of freedom associated…

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