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FREE ESSAY ON WUTHERING HEIGHTS

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Emily Brontë’s “Wuthering Heights”
This paper discusses Emily Brontë’s “Wuthering Heights”, a novel demonstrating fragmentation through separation. -- 1,430 words; MLA

"Wuthering Heights"
A literary review of "Wuthering Heights" by Emily Bronte. -- 650 words;

"Wuthering Heights" - The End
A commentary on the final pages of Emily Bronte's "Wuthering Heights". -- 4,452 words; MLA

The Madness of "Wuthering Heights"
A look at madness in Emily Bronte's "Wuthering Heights, focusing on Catherine Linton and Heathcliff and the effects of madness on themselves and the people around them. -- 1,389 words; MLA

"Wuthering Heights"
A discussion of the influences on personality development as seen in Emily Bronte's "Wuthering Heights". -- 1,330 words;

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WUTHERING HEIGHTS

Wuthering Heights is a novel of revenge and romantic love. It tells the stories of two
families: the Earnshaws who live at the Heights, at the edge of the moors, and the
genteel and refined Lintons who live at Thrushcross Grange. When Mr. Earnshaw brings home
a foundling to live in the family, complex feelings of jealousy and rivalry as well as a
soulful alliance between Heathcliff and Catherine develop. Believing that he has been
rejected by Catherine, Heathcliff leaves to make his fortune. When he returns, Catherine
is married to Edgar Linton, but she still feels deeply attached to Heathcliff. Disaster
follows for the two families as Heathcliff takes revenge on them all. Only the second
generation, young Cathy and Hareton Earnshaw, survive to go beyond this destructive
passion in their mutual love. 
Structurally the novel is rich and complex. There are two generations of characters, and
the themes and relationships of the first generation are reflected in the second but with
differences that increase our understanding. Bronte's use of point of view leads to many
questions about the narrators who control the unraveling of events. It is as if the main
characters are seen through a series of mirrors, each causing a certain amount of
distortion. Without an omniscient voice controlling sympathies, the reader must get
inside the characters' minds, the one telling the story as well as the one about whom the
story is being told. Probing this complex web of relationships and motives leads to
intense psychological analysis, and in this way the novel mirrors life itself. Learning
occurs in pieces and is always subject to revision.
The themes of Wuthering Heights should appeal to the teenage student. The various power
relationships involved with romantic love and vengeance depicted in the novel are also a
part of the high school students' social milieu. Teachers who make relevant connections
between the themes and characters of the novel and the students' own preoccupations will
find this novel opens up discussion of many of the students' concerns. The exercises
suggested in this guide are designed to promote such connections. More activities and
questions are offered than can be used so that teachers can choose those that help make
reading and discussing the novel a meaningful experience for students. 

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