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2659152
THEMES WITHIN WUTHERING HEIGHTS
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Mind Map on THEMES WITHIN WUTHERING HEIGHTS, created by daniel-maurice on 05/05/2015.
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THEMES WITHIN WUTHERING HEIGHTS
REVENGE
Predominant Theme throughout the novel
When H.C cannot have the woman he loves, he turns to tormenting his childhood tormenter
Hindley never refused a chance to humiliate H.C
So as vengeance H.C seeks control of the Heights and the Grange
He also seeks to destroy Hindley
Vengeance is made easier for H.C because Hindley drinks and gambles
Revenge is a major motivator for H.C
And he succeeds on his quest for vengeance
Though he admits by the end of the novel that his quest for vengeance has lost its thrill
Not everyone is bitter though
Despite his degredation Hareton rises above his abuse and is a decent person
LOVE
H.C and Cath1 obviously have a transcendent romantic connection
Cath1's love for Edgar is tied to her desire to become 'the greatest woman of the neighborhood'
So much that their love has hardly any romance to it
However Cath1 is so hateful of H.C societal position that she questions his capacity to love early on the novel
H.C and Cath1 impassioned affection connects them from their childhood to the afterlife
All of the other examples of love – or, more precisely, marriage – are diminished in comparison
Except Cath2 and Hareton who enjoy a rare experience of genuine love
Bronte explores many different types of love (Familial, Platonic, Romantic, Erotic
But mystical love transcends them all
FAMILY
Families in WH are a source of violence, alienation, jealousy, and greed.
As in opposed to comfort
The events that transpire in the novel can be seen as a result of H.C's addition to the family
H.C is perhaps the illegitimate son of Mr Earnshaw
As H.C is the name of a child that died in infancy
However H.C is never christened as an Earnshaw
Most of the primary characters in the novels are either Linton/Earnshaw, or both
Except H.C, Nellie, Lockwood
H.C is neither he gets revenge by taking everything that belongs to the Earnshaws and Lintons
However family recovers in the end as Hareton becomes owner of the Heights
Whose relative and namesake(?) built the Heights in 1500
The gothic aspect is also emphasised as her lovers are related
She brings them together because they are related
SUPERNATURAL
The SPN completely permeates the novel
When the ghost of Cath1 tries to enter the Heights, Lockwood curiosity is piqued
The people, setting, environment are all infused with SPN natural elements
From the outset, H.C is teased for being a dark advocate of the SPN - Nellie dubs him 'imp of Satan'
Nellie later on in the novel contemplates whether he is a ghoul or vampire
The novel ends with the suggestion that H.C and Cath1 will haunt the moors forever
The Moors, even the local village all seems to be touched by something ominous
Including the local Chapel
Bronte complicates the gothic genre by making H.C a very complex and multi-faceted character
SUFFERING
Nearly everyone in the novel suffers from physical or emotion trauma
Some die from it
H.C avoids physical illness his love for Cath1 leads to the suffering of others
However he seems to enjoy suffereing
Pleads for Cath1's ghost to haunt him
No one really wants to take responsibility for the misery that results from his or her own foolish decisions
Including Isabella
H.C and Cath1' s suffering surpasses the others
As they still blame each other
Suffering is central to Catherine and Heathcliff's expression of love
Without their misery, their love would not be provocative to the readers
SOCIETY AND CLASS
Despite the setting, both families abide by the rules of society
Brontë lets us know through Catherine's aspirations to marry Edgar Linton that Thrushcross Grange is superior
Both the Lintons and the Earnshaws are middleclass
But marriage is still the only way Cath1 can better herself
'Did it never strike you that if Heathcliff and I married, we should be beggars?'
Being an orphan with no family ties and no land, Heathcliff is the lowest part of society
Hindley denies Heathcliff an education implies that he is trying to force him to become a servant
It makes sense that Heathcliff's revenge is tied directly to the novel's class issues
Heathcliff seeks to punish Hindley's son, Hareton, by keeping him in a low station and denying him an education
Heathcliff threatens Hindley's status as heir to the Earnshaw fortune.status as heir to the Earnshaw fortune.
However ,ultimately Hindley's own behavior that loses him his family home.
BETRAYAL
H.C frames Cath1's betrayal dishonesty to herself
Isabella betrays Cath1 and Ed's trust concerning H.C
Ed betrays family loyalty by disowning her
Cath2 betrays her father by leaving the Grange
Self liberation is more important to characters than abiding to loyalty
Like REVENGE, it drives the plot forward
If Mr Earnshaw had not brought H.C the W.H
He never would have violated the families boundaries
Or betrayed his wife
Although Cath1 marries Ed, she does not see it as betraying her love for H.C
However H.C does
OTHERNESS
Heathcliff is made to feel like an outsider by his own adoptive family
Fuels his desire for revenge
It is never clear where H.C originates
He is 'found' in Liverpool, a port City where immigrants entered England
'Imp of Satan'
H.C referred to as a gipsey - SPN
Dichotomy of H.C dark complexion
And Ed's fair skin and features
H.C's otherness may explain Cath1 and Isabella's attraction to him
'We don't in general take to foreigners here...' Nelly to Lockwood
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