Narrative Criticism In Wuthering Heights

1118 Words5 Pages

Wuthering Heights is a Victorian novel written by Emily Bronte, it was published in 1847, it’s a set on Yorkshire moors in the 18th century under the pseudonym Ellis Bell. the formal unity of wuthering heights has long been admired by critics.
As its form has 323 pages is highly organized coherence, combined with its tight chronological organization and the opposing locations and voices within it help to structure the narrative, although Wuthering heights is said to be the most imaginative and poetic of all the Bronte’s novel, ‘’it is also, as the introduction to this edition explores, one of the most potent revenge narratives. Its ingenious narrative structure, vivid evocation of landscape, and the extraordinary power of its depiction of love and hatred have given it a unique place in English literature’’ Oxford university press(2009). the major character in this novel is Heathcliff who is an orphan brought to Wuthering heights that falls madly in love with Catherine. Humiliated and hurt, he seeks fortune and acquires Wuthering heights and Thrushcross grange. Catherine spoiled, free-spirited girl …show more content…

and it is classified as a ‘’hybrid’’ because of this gothic is defined by anxiety about the unknown it is characterized by its use of terror and suspense , often accompanied and heightened by elements of the ghost and the supernatural .it specializes in the evocation of nightmarish repetition and a claustrophobic atmosphere. Its classified as a ‘’hybrid’’ because of this M. Bakhtin (1981) , in his article ‘’towards a methodology for the study of the novel’’ (in the dialogic imagination: four essay ,trans .C .Emerson and Holquist, ed. M. Holquist, University of Texas press, pp 3-4) , includes his own definition off hybridity and how it applies to the novel. In this research I will discuss the ways that our novel covers this different genre in terms of

Open Document