Emily Brontë's Wuthering HeightsHarold Bloom Bloom's Literary Criticism, 2007 - 203 Seiten Set in the raw and frightening beauty of the English moors, Emily Bronte's ""Wuthering heights"" is the story of two lovers drawn together from the moment they meet. Their love is consuming and destructive, forbidden and inescapable. This volume offers analysis for students seeking insight into this haunting tale. |
Inhalt
Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights | 9 |
On Wuthering Heights | 15 |
Emily Brontës Bible of Hell | 33 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
androgyny Arnold Kettle becomes Bersani Bildungsroman British Brontë's novel Byronic Catherine and Heathcliff Catherine Earnshaw Catherine II Cathy and Hareton Cathy's chap chapter characters Charlotte Brontë child childhood colonial conventional critics culture dark desire domestic dream Edgar Linton Emily Brontë Emily Jane Brontë energies English father female feminine feminist fiction figure Frankenstein Gérin Gilbert and Gubar Gondal gypsy Hareton Earnshaw Heathcliff and Catherine heaven hell Hindley Hindley's human imagination Isabella Jane Eyre Joseph language Leo Bersani Linton literary Lockwood male marriage marry Mary Shelley metaphor Milton's moors mother myth narration narrative nature Nelly Dean Nelly's nineteenth-century oppression original passion patriarchal plot poems Q. D. Leavis reader relationship represent Romantic Satan savage seems sense sexual sister social soul Stevie Davies story structure suggests symbolic tells Thrushcross Grange traditional Victorian whip window woman women words writing Wuthering Heights young Cathy