Wuthering Heights (1847), the only novel by Emily Brontë, defies the conventions of Victorian novels, by exploring the darker aspects of human psyche such as passion, obsession and instinct etc. the novel is brimming with symbolisms and striking imageries. At a glance the two households Wuthering heights and Thrushcross grange represents the two contradictory nature of human kind. Wuthering heights is a metaphor for human instinct and the nature while Thrushcross grange is a metaphor for refined culture and civilisation.
Wuthering Heights employs
a multi-layered narrative structure, where the story is told through the
perspectives of several narrators. Its polyphonic in nature also he employs
china- box technique to unravel the central plot. The primary narrative is
framed by Lockwood, an outsider, who encounters the tale of Wuthering Heights
through the accounts of Nelly Dean, the housekeeper. This frame narrative perhaps
complicates the reader's understanding, as we rely on secondary interpretations
of the events. The unreliable nature of these narrators adds layers of ambiguity
and complexity to the events described. The use of embedded narrative (a story
within a story) mirrors the Gothic convention of revealing secrets gradually
and from fragmented perspectives. Nelly’s account is central to this, though
she is not a neutral observer, as her judgments and biases influences Lockwood.
Emily Bronte
brilliantly fuses Gothic elements in the novel to bring novelty. The desolate,
storm-laden setting, intense emotions, violence, and supernatural elements constitute
a special aura of gothic. Wuthering
Heights, the house itself functions as a Gothic character, symbolizing all the
human instinct and untamed passions. It stands in stark contrast to Thrushcross
Grange, which represents civilization, order, and gentility. This opposition
between Wuthering Heights and Thrushcross Grange is often interpreted as a
conflict between nature and culture, wild passion and refined restraint.
The
novel's dark, brooding atmosphere is heightened by Brontë's use of storm
imagery and the isolation of the moorland setting. Heathcliff’s obsession with
Catherine and his subsequent acts of revenge embody the Gothic archetype of the
Byronic hero, he is a figure both terrifying and tragically romantic, driven by
raw emotion and vengeance.The novel also incorporates the supernatural through
the haunting of Wuthering Heights by Catherine’s ghost. Heathcliff’s desperate
plea to be united with Catherine in death underscores the Gothic fascination
with death and the life after death.
Through
the lens of psychoanalysis, Wuthering Heights can be explored as a
representation of repressed desires and the unconscious mind. Heathcliff’s
obsessive attachment to Catherine has been interpreted as a manifestation of
the id his primal instincts and desires dominate his actions. Catherine’s own
conflicting desires, her love for Heathcliff and her social ambition in
marrying Edgar Linton could be seen as a battle between the id (her passionate
connection with Heathcliff) and the superego (the social norms that dictate her
marriage to Edgar).
From a feminist
perspective, Wuthering Heights explores the limitations imposed on women in
Victorian society. Catherine Earnshaw is caught between her desire for freedom
and self-expression (symbolized by Heathcliff) and the constraints of social
propriety and class expectations (symbolized by Edgar Linton). Her decision to
marry Edgar reflects the limited options available to women of her time, where
marriage was often a means of securing financial and social stability rather
than emotional fulfillment. Catherine’s split identity, wild and free-spirited
with Heathcliff, yet constrained and proper with Edgar, reveals the conflict
between individual desires and social expectations for women. Her eventual
mental and physical decline can be seen as the result of this inner conflict
and the repression of her true nature.
Isabella Linton,
too, suffers under the patriarchy, first as the naïve victim of Heathcliff’s
manipulation and then as a neglected wife. Her eventual escape to the South
with her son represents a defiance of Victorian norms, although her life remains
defined by her earlier victimization.
Through a Marxist lens, Wuthering Heights can be viewed as a commentary
on class struggle and economic power. Heathcliff’s rise from an orphan of
unknown origins to a powerful, land-owning figure mirrors the instability of
class boundaries in the novel. His desire to own both Wuthering Heights and
Thrushcross Grange symbolizes not just his thirst for revenge but also his
attempt to assert dominance over the social structures that once oppressed him.
The
novel portrays the impact of wealth and property on relationships and
identities. Catherine’s decision to marry Edgar is motivated by her recognition
of the need for economic stability, highlighting how social class and wealth
shape personal choices. Heathcliff’s exploitation of Hindley’s gambling debts
to take control of Wuthering Heights further underscores the power dynamics
rooted in economic domination.
The
isolation of the two estates also serves as a metaphor for the class divisions
that dominate the novel. The Grange, with its refined and controlled
environment, represents the upper class, while Wuthering Heights, with its
wild, untamed surroundings, embodies the working class. The tension between
these two worlds plays out in the relationships between the characters.
Heathcliff’s racial
ambiguity has also led to post-colonial readings of Wuthering Heights. His
description as a “dark-skinned gypsy” has prompted critics to consider him as a
symbol of the racial other, an outsider whose presence disrupts the social
order of the Earnshaws and Lintons. His treatment by Hindley and others can be
seen as indicative of the racial prejudices of the time, while his eventual rise
to power challenges the social hierarchy. Heathcliff’s alienation and desire
for revenge can also be interpreted as a reaction to colonial exploitation.
Critical commentaries:
E. M. Forster praised
Wuthering Heights for its powerful depiction of human instinct, passion and
obsession. He viewed the novel as transcending conventional realism and exploring
real human psyche by blending supernatural elements. He praised Emily Brontë’s
ability to create characters like Heathcliff and Catherine who symbolize primitive
forces.
Virginia Woolf
praised Wuthering Heights as a "brilliant, brooding novel," and
acknowledged Emily Brontë’s originality. Woolf described the novel as
possessing a "wild power" that set it apart from the more genteel
works of other Victorian writers. Woolf noted that the novel’s genius lay in
its ability to break with traditional forms of narrative and character. She made
the story a psychological exploration of passion, love, and cruelty.
J. Hillis Miller, a key figure in deconstructive criticism, analyzed Wuthering Heights as a text that defies stable interpretations. In his view, the novel’s multiple narrators, fragmented time structure, and ambiguous character motivations create a narrative that resists closure. Miller saw Wuthering Heights as a novel full of contradictions and uncertainties, where the boundary between life and death, love and hatred, civilization and savagery is constantly blurred. He argued that the novel destabilizes traditional binaries and challenges the reader to question the nature of identity and morality.
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