Name: Joshi Toral
Paper: E-c-201: The Romantic Literature
Topic: Theme, Motif and symbols
in Wuthering Heights
SEM: 1, part 2.
Year: 2011-2012
Submitted to,
Dr.Dilip Barad,
Bhavnagar University,
Bhavnagar
· Introduction:-
Wuthering
Heights is written by a Emily Bronte. Wuthering Heights is a gothic novel also
realist fiction Wuthering Heights publication in 1847.
Today,
Wuthering Heights has a secure position in the canon if world literature.
Emily
Bronte is raved as one of the late eighteenth century, a style of literature
that featured supernatural encounters, crumbling ruins, moonless night, and
grotesque imagery, seeking to create effects of mystery and fear.
· Theme:-
vThe Destructiveness of a Love That Never Changes:-
Catherine
and Heathcliff’s passion for one another seems to be the center of Wuthering
Heights, given that it is stronger and more lasting than any other emotion
displayed in the novel, and that it is the source of most of the major
conflicts that structure the novel’s plot. As she tells Catherine and
Heathcliff’s story, Nelly criticizes both of them harshly, condemning their
passion as immoral, but this passion is obviously one of the most compelling
and memorable aspects of the book. It is not easy to decide whether Brontë
intends the reader to condemn these lovers as blameworthy or to idealize them
as romantic heroes whose love transcends social norms and conventional
morality. The book is actually structured around two parallel love stories, the
first half of the novel centering on the love between Catherine and Heathcliff,
while the less dramatic second half features the developing love between young
Catherine and Hareton. In contrast to the first, the latter tale ends happily,
restoring peace and order to Wuthering Heights and Thrushcross Grange. The
differences between the two love stories contribute to the reader’s
understanding of why each ends the way it does.
Moreover, Catherine and Heathcliff’s
love is based on their shared perception that they are identical. Catherine
declares, famously, “I am
Heathcliff,” while Heathcliff, upon Catherine’s death, wails that he cannot
live without his “soul,” meaning Catherine. Their love denies difference, and
is strangely asexual. The two do not kiss in dark corners or arrange secret
trysts, as adulterers do. Given that Catherine and Heathcliff’s love is based
upon their refusal to change over time or embrace difference in others, it is
fitting that the disastrous problems of their generation are overcome not by
some climactic reversal, but simply by the inexorable passage of time, and the
rise of a new and distinct generation. Ultimately, Wuthering Heights
presents a vision of life as a process of change, and celebrates this process
over and against the romantic intensity of
its principal characters.
vThe Precariousness of Social Class
As members of the gentry, the
Earnshaws and the Lintons occupy a somewhat precarious place within the
hierarchy of late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century British society. At
the top of British society was the royalty, followed by the aristocracy, then
by the gentry, and then by the lower classes, who made up the vast majority of
the population. Although the gentry, or upper middle class, possessed servants
and often large estates, they held a nonetheless fragile social position. The social
status of aristocrats was a formal and settled matter, because aristocrats had
official titles. Members of the gentry, however, held no titles, and their
status was thus subject to change. A man might see himself as a gentleman but
find, to his embarrassment, that his neighbors did not share this view. A
discussion of whether or not a man was really a gentleman would consider such
questions as how much land he owned, how many tenants and servants he had, how
he spoke, whether he kept horses and a carriage, and whether his money came
from land or “trade”—gentlemen scorned banking and commercial activities.
Considerations of class status often
crucially inform the characters’ motivations in Wuthering Heights.
Catherine’s decision to marry Edgar so that she will be “the greatest woman of
the neighborhood” is only the most obvious example. The Lintons are relatively
firm in their gentry’ status but nonetheless take great pains to prove this
status through their behaviors. The Earnshaws, on the other hand, rest on much
shakier ground socially. They do not have a carriage, they have less land, and
their house, as Lockwood remarks with great puzzlement, resembles that of a
“homely, northern farmer” and not that of a gentleman. The shifting nature of
social status is demonstrated most strikingly in Heathcliff’s trajectory from
homeless waif to young gentleman-by-adoption to common laborer to gentleman
again (although the status-conscious Lockwood remarks that Heathcliff is only a
gentleman in “dress and manners”).
· Motifs
v Doubles
Brontë organizes her novel by
arranging its elements—characters, places, and themes—into pairs. Catherine and
Heathcliff are closely matched in many ways, and see themselves as identical.
Catherine’s character is divided into two warring sides: the side that wants
Edgar and the side that wants Heathcliff. Catherine and young Catherine are
both remarkably similar and strikingly different. The two houses, Wuthering
Heights and Thrushcross Grange, represent opposing worlds and values. The novel
has not one but two distinctly different narrators, Nelly and Mr. Lockwood. The
relation between such paired elements is usually quite complicated, with the
members of each pair being neither exactly alike nor diametrically opposed. For
instance, the Lintons and the Earnshaws may at first seem to represent opposing
sets of values, but, by the end of the novel, so many intermarriages have taken
place that one can no longer distinguish between the two families.
.
vThe Conflict Between Nature and Culture
In Wuthering Heights, Brontë
constantly plays nature and culture against each other. Nature is represented
by the Earnshaw family and by Catherine and Heathcliff in particular. These
characters are governed by their passions, not by reflection or ideals of civility.
Correspondingly, the house where they live—Wuthering Heights—comes to symbolize
a similar wildness. On the other hand, Thrushcross Grange and the Linton family
represent culture, refinement, convention, and cultivation.
However, Brontë tells her story in such a way
as to prevent our interest and sympathy from straying too far from the wilder
characters, and often portrays the more civilized characters as despicably weak
and silly. This method of characterization prevents the novel from flattening out
into a simple privileging of culture over nature, or vice versa. Thus in the
end the reader must acknowledge that the novel is no mere allegory.
· Symbols
Symbols are objects, characters, figures, and colors used to
represent abstract ideas or concepts.
vMoors
The constant emphasis on landscape
within the text of Wuthering Heights endows the setting with symbolic
importance. This landscape is comprised primarily of moors: wide, wild
expanses, high but somewhat soggy, and thus infertile. Moorland cannot be cultivated,
and its uniformity makes navigation difficult. It features particularly
waterlogged patches in which people could potentially drown. (This possibility
is mentioned several times in Wuthering Heights.) Thus, the moors serve
very well as symbols of the wild threat posed by nature. As the setting for the
beginnings of Catherine and Heathcliff’s bond (the two plays on the moors
during childhood), the moorland transfers its symbolic associations onto the
love affair.
vGhosts
Ghosts appear throughout Wuthering
Heights, as they do in most other works of Gothic fiction, yet Brontë
always presents them in such a way that whether they really exist remains
ambiguous. Thus the world of the novel can always be interpreted as a realistic
one. Certain ghosts—such as Catherine’s spirit when it appears to Lockwood in
Chapter III—may be explained as nightmares. The villagers’ alleged sightings of
Heathcliff’s ghost in Chapter XXXIV could be dismissed as unverified
superstition. Whether or not the ghosts are “real,” they symbolize the
manifestation of the past within the present, and the way memory stays with
people, permeating their day-to-day lives.
.
Hello Toral,
ReplyDeleteYou have put points as guiding benchmark to your blog readers so that the reader is not misplaced while reading, that's a good point.
Could you please tell me, how love is the reason for destruction?
good question, if love become passionate than it creates destruction.For example when Heathcliff's love for catherine becomes passionate it creates destruction for their life as well as others life.. thank you
DeleteHey Toral,
ReplyDeleteThere are themes in the novel like revenge, and motif like repetition that you can include in your blog.it was good that you described all the things.Nice one .keep it up.Thank You....