Wuthering Heights: A Drama of BeingSheffield Academic Press, 1997 - 200 Seiten In this unconventional study, David Holbrook sets out to demonstrate that this novel is a dramatization of Emily Bronte's own tormented psyche. It draws on various sources in psychoanalytical thought to unravel the novel's dynamics. The author invokes the Jungian analysis offered by Dr Hannah Segal and others, and adds to these the insights of D.W. Winnicott, W.R.D. Fairbairn and R.D. Laing. He sees the novel as a dramatization of intrapsychic conflict within Emily's own soul and as belonging to a remarkable effort on her part to find harmony and fulfilment by engaging with the most savage proclivities within her, as they emerged from the sources of her Irish historical roots and her strange isolated life. |
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Seite 35
A Drama of Being David Holbrook. There is a problem in that Heathcliff seems at times as Q.D. Leavis says , ' an unsatisfactory composite with empty places in his history and no continuity of character ' . But this is the problem of the ...
A Drama of Being David Holbrook. There is a problem in that Heathcliff seems at times as Q.D. Leavis says , ' an unsatisfactory composite with empty places in his history and no continuity of character ' . But this is the problem of the ...
Seite 92
... problem of iden- tity and so must be merged at all costs with the dead female element source in the grave , while benignity and love are fulfilled in the new and transformed Cathy and Hareton ( who have to learn to love through the ...
... problem of iden- tity and so must be merged at all costs with the dead female element source in the grave , while benignity and love are fulfilled in the new and transformed Cathy and Hareton ( who have to learn to love through the ...
Seite 115
... problem ' ! What must be said , I believe , is that it is Emily who has the mother problem , and her Edgar is but one of the tendencies within herself , related to that problem : the intransigant female self that seeks power over that ...
... problem ' ! What must be said , I believe , is that it is Emily who has the mother problem , and her Edgar is but one of the tendencies within herself , related to that problem : the intransigant female self that seeks power over that ...
Inhalt
Contents | 7 |
CHAPTER 1 | 24 |
CHAPTER 3 | 46 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accept achieved anima animus asks aspects becomes begins believe belong called Catherine Catherine's Cathy Chapter characters child close comes complete continue course creative dead death deep destructive discussed dream dynamics Earnshaw Edgar elements Emily Brontë Emily's existence experience expression eyes face fantasy father feel female figure ghost give goes hand Hannah Hareton hate heart Heath Heathcliff Hindley human impulse individuation inner interpretation Isabella kind Leavis Linton live Lockwood look male marriage marry meaning mind moral mother nature Nelly Nelly Dean never normal novel pain passion perhaps person play Poems possible problem psyche question reader reality relation relationship represents says schizoid seeking seems seen sense soul speaks story strange surely symbolism tell thing trying turn unconscious whole woman Wuthering Heights yearning