Wuthering Heights Gothic Themes

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  • Created by: NatBSly
  • Created on: 26-10-19 00:40
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  • Gothic Literature in Wuthering Heights
    • SETTING AND WEATHER
      • Enclosed, haunted, deteriorated, imprisonment.
        • ''building old and dark at first'' 20
        • ''proof that the place was haunted […] its swarming with ghosts and goblins!'' 3
        • ''among a wilderness of crumbling griffins''
        • Even the narration has an element of trapped
      • A decaying shell of what was once a thriving world.
        • ''when beneath its walls, I perceived decay had made progress'' 20
        • ''mental deterioration; he acquired a slouching gait'' 8
      • Architecture.
      • Wild and remote.
        • ''on that bleak-top the earth was hard with a black frost and the air made me shiver through every limb'' 2
        • ''[the chapel] lies in a hollow, between two hills: an elevated hollow, near a swamp'' 3
        • ''dark evening for summer: the clouds appeared inclined to thunder''
        • ''the storm came rattling over the heights in full fury. There was a violent wind, as well as thunder'' 9
        • ''the frosty air that cut about her shouldres as keen as a knife'' 12
    • CHARACTERS
      • Protagonist saved after a fall from grace, and seeking revenge on others.
        • Heathcliff getting revenge on Hindley, Hareton (turns him against Hindley) and Cathy.
          • ''he pays Dad back for what he gies to me- he curses Daddy for cursing me'' 11
          • ''Hareton... lives in his own as a servant deprived of advantages and wages'' 3
      • Heroine trapped by an aristocratic villain.
        • Cathy is trapped by Heathcliff and forced to marry Linton, and is then treated badly after he dies.
          • ''that lass owes me her services for her bread; I am not going to nurture her in luxury and idleness'' 15
        • In a way, Nelly is also trapped an manipulated within the lives of the characters as she narrates the story.
          • ''I'll take measures to secure you woman!'' 13
      • Psychological torment, guilt, self-division and paranoid delusion.
        • Characters are constantly tormented by their love- should they be with who they love regardless of society?
          • ''a maniac's fury kindled under her brows: she struggled desperately to disengage her from Linton's arms'' 12
        • The Victorian audience could have seen madness in the characters as supernatural and a foreign idea that they disagreed with, instead of seeing it as emotion.
          • ''tossing about, she increased her feverish bewilderment to madness, and tore the pillow with her teeth'' 12
          • ''soon I found her delirious strength much surpassed mine'' 12
      • Characters paralyzed by past.
        • The children are 'haunted' by their parents pasts in who they are forced to marry and how other characters treat them.
          • ''Hindley calls him a vagabond and won't let him with us, not eat with us anymore'' 3
      • Gothic Hero.
        • Interestingly, the story does not seem to have a hero but rather an anti-hero, Heathcliff, who we are meant to feel sympathy for.
    • ATMOSPHERE
      • Mystery
      • Fallen world.
      • Thrills of ferafullness.
        • The thrill and terror of Lockwood seeing Catherine's ghost.
      • Claustrophobic.
        • In a way, the framed narration makes the characters and the reader feel trapped in the stroy.
    • THEMES
      • Secrets.
      • Ancient vs modern, Fantastic vs realistic.
      • Romantic ideas, and the rejections of them.
      • Encroachment of the past onto the present.
        • 2nd generation are deeply affected by the actions and prejudice of their parents.
      • Violence
        • Many of the characters show violence, both externally and internally, to themselves and to others.
          • ''Hindley threw [the iron weight], hitting [Heathcliff] on the breast, and down he fell'' 4
          • ''[Cathy] irresistibly impelled by the naughty spirit within her, slapped me [Ellen]'' 8
          • ''[Heathcliff] I have no pity! I have no pity! The more worms writhe, the more I yearn to crush out their entrails'' 14
    • SUPERNATURAL
      • Ghosts.
        • In chapter 3, Lockwood is visited in a dream by Catherine's ghost who is creepy and gory.
          • ''''Come in!'' he sobbed. ''Cathy do come Oh do- once more!'' 3
          • ''her spirit- I have a strong faith in ghosts; I have a conviction that they can, and do exist; among us!'' 15
          • ''a child's face looking through the window'' 3
      • Dreams.
        • In chapter 3, Lockwood has two dreams: one with religious symbolism and another with Catherine's ghost.
          • ''the intense horror of a nightmare came over me''
      • Danger and death.
        • There are many deaths and illnesses that impact the people in the family.
          • ''he lay an image of sadness, and resignation, waiting his death'' 14
          • ''cheeks are hollow, and your eyes bloodshot. Like a person starving with hunger, and going blind with loss of sleep'' 20
          • ''he died quietly in his chair one October evening'' 5
          • ''he died true to his character, drunk as a lord'' 3
        • Catherine's ghost represents death and danger (as she tries to attack Lockwood).
    • GOTHIC SUBLIME

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