Online Literary Criticism Collection
Links below don’t belong? CONTACT US!
Return to: Literary Criticism Collection Home | ipl Home
Sites about Wuthering Heights
by Emily Bronte
Emily Bronte’s novel, set in nineteenth-century Yorkshire, which tells the tale of an intense connection between a young girl, Catherine, and an orphan, Heathcliff, and the disastrous results as the years go by.
Characters: Heathcliff, Catherine, Edgar Linton
Critical sites about Wuthering Heights
- The Magnanimity of Wuthering Heights
- http://www.usfca.edu/~southerr/wuthering.html
- ” The way by which a masterpiece as unanticipated as Wuthering Heights comes to be written, involving, as it did, the gradual evolution from such early childish games to more complex games of written language (serial stories transcribed by the children in minute italic handwriting meant to resemble print; secret plays, or “bed plays,”written at bedtime; the transcribing of the ambitious Gondal and Angria sagas, which were to be viable for nearly fifteen years) is so compelling a tale, so irresistible a legend, one is tempted to see in it a miniature history of the imagination’s triumph, in the most socially restricted of environments. “
- Contains: Content Analysis
- Author: Joyce Carol Oates
- From: The Profane Art: Essays and Reviews
- Keywords:
Sorry! Our collection does not contain any other (non-critical) sites about Wuthering Heights!
Do you know of any that you can recommend?
Use these links to search for Wuthering Heights outside the IPL.
Click a link below to automatically search that site for Wuthering Heights:
articles on Wuthering Heights (may not be full text):
Google Scholar | Microsoft Live Search |
Find Articles
find online version of Wuthering Heights
(recent authors’ works generally not available for free):
Univ. of Va.’s eBook Library |
Project Gutenberg |
Google Books
Wuthering Heights on the About network:
About.com
Factual information on Wuthering Heights:
Infoplease
Search Engines:
Search engines are also a great place to start research,
but they can also lead to many commercial
and/or non-authoritative resources.
Search engines:
Alta Vista |
Google |
Yahoo!
metasearch engines:
Ixquick Metasearch |
All the Web.com |
Fazzle |
Mamma Metasearch |
exalead
Wuthering Heights‘s works in libraries:
WorldCat
Last Updated Apr 29, 2013