Sunday, March 3, 2019
Briefly outline the main features of the ‘Wuthering Heights’ and ‘The Woman in Black’
The Gothic genre became familiar in the mid-eighteeth centuary when The Castle of Otranto by Horace Warpole was written. Emily Bronte was influence by The Bridegroom of Barna, print in the nineteenth centuary when writing Wuthering Heights. Today, the equivalent of the Gothic fresh a horror novel by writers such as Steven King. The cleaning woman in Black is a modern novel with Gothic influences. The chief(prenominal) features of the Gothic novels were the of import guinea pig, usually an anti ace dark, demonic and motivated by barbaric cruelty. This man usually had mysterious origins and did not value some(prenominal) of societys morals.Later, in the nineteenth centuary when the Romantic movement developed, the Gothic anti-hero became the Byronic hero in many novels. the like the Gothic protagonist, the Byronic hero usually had a mysterious past, as well as dark, good looks and a hatred for societys moral laws. Heathcliff, in Emily Brontes novel Wuthering Heights, is a g ood ideal of a Byronic hero. Another authoritative feature of many Gothic novels is the line upting. Gothic novels argon usually set in a grim, hostile landscape very much on a deserted moor or fen, as in the case of Wuthering Heights and Susan Hills The Woman in Black.Such grim landscape often mirrors the character of the hero. thither are besides references to the supernatural in many of these novels, such as the apparition of Jennet Humfrye in The Woman in Black or the signature of Cathy in Wuthering Heights. thither is in any case a strong supernatural constituent in these stories often linked to the important character. Revenge is usually a strong theme in Gothic novels. The anti hero often seeks retaliation against the people around him, perhaps because of some earlier abuse he was the victim of or simply against society in general, because of the derangement he feels he has suffered.For example, in Wuthering Heights Heathcliff revenges himself against Hindleys so n Hareton because of the pain Hindley caused him when he was alive. former(a) features of Gothic novels include the presence of an ancient retainer, usually an old man. in that location is as well as usually a victim, often a fair haired teenage woman. She is supposed to represent good and the moral values which the anti hero is trying so hard to destroy. The idea of a Gothic anti hero is particular prominent in Wuthering Heights.In this phonograph record the main character is Heathcliff, an orphan who is brought to Wuthering Heights by the old Mr Earnshaw in his childhood. Like some Gothic heroes, Heathcliff has dark, good looks, a mysterious past and an unquenchable desire to revenge himself on the people he feels have wronged him. The write up of Wuthering Heights revolves around Heathcliffs life and his relationship with his soul-mate Cathy. Heathcliffs looks, and in particular his eyes are described by the housekeeper and narrator Nelly as that couple of black fiends, so deeply buried, who neer open their windows boldly.Later in the book Heathcliff is bank lineed with Cathys future husband Edgar Linton The contrast resembled what you see in exchanging a bleak, hilly, ember country for a beautiful, fertile valley. This description not solitary(prenominal) describes Heathcliffs looks but also his charater, bleak suggesting his personality and hilly describing the mood swings he has. Heathcliffs desire for revenge against Edgar Linton, Hindley Earnshaw and, to a certain extent, Cathy, is shown by his actions during the novel. He abuses Hindleys son Hareton, as well as Edgars sister Isabella and his daughter Catherine.In contrast to Wuthering Heights, The Woman in Black does not have a clear anti hero. Instead there are twain characters who share this role. They are Arthur Kipps and the woman in black, Jennet Humfrye. Kipps is not the traditional Gothic hero because he does not have dark, good looks or a mysterious past. Instead, he is more like L ockwood or Edgar Linton in Wuthering Heights. The other main character shares some of the traits of the revenger and the victim in many Gothic novels. Jennet Humfrye is a ghost who had lost a child she had out of wedlock and died of a wasting disease.She is now revenging herself on innocent victims. Whilst the idea of revenge is alike(p) to the Gothic hero, Humfrye is a very different character because she is dead and also a woman. She is also not a traditional Gothic victim, because in spite of being female she has a wasting disease and therefore isnt beautiful. She also does not embody the positives of society, such as chastity until marriage that most Gothic victims do. The setting and atmosphere in Wuthering Heights and The Woman in Black is also an important feature of both novels.The setting is one of biggest similarities between the two books as both are set in grim, inhospitable landscapes- Wuthering Heights on the Yorkshire Moors and The Woman in Black on a bleak marshlan d. Another affinity is the houses where the two novels are set Wuthering Heights and Eel Marsh House. Both houses are bleak and very isolated. Arthur Kipps first describes Eel Marsh House as a tall, gaunt house of grey stone. There is a standoff of adverse weather such as besieges in both books. This echoes the personalities of the main characters and also helps to add even more tension and atmosphere to the plot.For example in The Woman in Black, when Kipps discovers the nursery has been wrecked, there is a storm going on outside. He is unsure whether the nursery has been damaged by the storm or whether Jennet Humfrye has been there. The intrusion of the supernatural features in both novels. In Wuthering Heights, it occurs at the beginning and at the end of the book, where Lockwood and then Heathcliff take in the ghost of Cathy. The Woman in Black is basically a ghost bilgewater and therefore the intrusion of the supernatural is a major part of the plot.In both books there is confusion between reality and the supernatural. In Wuthering Heights this occurs when Lockwood encounters Cathys ghost. It is kind of clear to the reader that Cathys ghost did actually appear but Lockwood manages to urge himself that he was dreaming, overlooking the broken window and the fact that he never went to sleep. In The Woman in Black, Arthur Kipps is very sceptical about the beingness of the woman in black to begin with and does not recognise the ghost when he first encounters her, describing her as another mourner, a woman.There are, however, clues that the woman is a ghost, just like in Wuthering Heights. She is dressed in a very old fashioned dress and disappears very suddenly. I think elements of the Gothic genre are used very put togetherively in both The Woman in Black and Wuthering Heights, especially since neither novel is specifically a Gothic novel. I think that the theme of revenge is most prominent in Wuthering Heights because it is the driving force behind the impatience of Heathcliffs character.I think the setting of the story is used to great effect in The Woman in Black because the adverse weather and desolate marsh add a lot of atmosphere and tension to the plot. I in person prefer Wuthering Heights because I feel that Emily Bronte has managed to create characters with great depth and has managed to efficaciously portray the passion between Heathcliff and Cathy. Also, whilst Wuthering Heights does have Gothic features to it, Bronte does not permit them compromise the storyline in any way.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.