Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Thematic & Structural Considerations

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Thematic & Structural Considerations"— Presentation transcript:

1 Thematic & Structural Considerations
Wuthering Heights Thematic & Structural Considerations

2 Industrial Revolution-1847
“Marked by rapid, violent social changes” Land ownership was a part of the gentry class Genteelness was about birth rights and moral character The economy was becoming more cash-based The middle class was created because of this and more powerful than landowning gentry Changes political power Changes rules of social acceptance

3 Implications of Social Change
Textual Evidence Social Class Ch2-Lockwood’s blunders Ch 5-$ as status as explained by Nelly Ch 6-Hindley making Heathcliff a servant Ch 7-Heathcliff wants to be like Edgar Ch11-Heathcliff lowers status of Hindley *source of motivation for revenge (theme) (Hareton) Yoemen (Lintons) Gentry (Heathcliff) Capitalist

4 Women’s Right Movement
Property Act of 1882 Single & Unmarried Women Common Law Doctrine Novel was published at the beginning of this movement in England It was about voting rights It was about married women’s property rights so they were the same as unmarried women.

5 Textual Evidence Ch9-Isabella’s reactions about being with Heathcliff
Ch10-marriage proposal that Cathy accepts from Edgar Ch13-implications of Cathy’s baby if it is a boy vs. girl Ch14-pg. 131 (approx)-quote Ch17-Hareton’s Inheritance

6 Textual Evidence Ch21-Buying off Mr. Green because of the Will
C25-Why does Edgar let young Cathy marry Linton? Ch28-Linton’s possessions, including the locket So what will happen to young Cathy? This is also a theme which also motivates revenge

7 Thematic Considerations: Death
b. Suitable arrangements do not reflect suicide a. Dies in a state of drunkeness Hindley b. Neither Linton nor Heathcliff become genuinely alarmed but it is too late c. Her burial is not addressed as a suicide a. Induces her own ill health Catherine b. His will states he is to be buried with Catherine (Nelly does not want to infringe on this) a. Dies of natural causes Linton a. Has a need to not be discovered as a suicide b. Wants to be next to Cathy but Linton was Heathcliff

8 Death & Burial Customs Pre-1823 Customs Insanity vs. self murdered
Felo-de-se Suicide was subject to even greater ignominy Could be buried at a cross-roads with a stake in the heart. Property could be forfeited to the Crown if discovered as a suicide Superstition-mirrors caused the soul to flee from the person and caused their death (suicide?) If you talk of death to the person and they commit suicide, you were an accomplice and would be subject to the law as well

9 Death & Burial Customs After 1823 Customs
Suicides could be legally buried in the churchyards but below wall so no one could step over grace and disturb the soul Buried in the church yard in the evening (hour + place) No minister need to come Nothing to be said over the person (lack of Christian burial)

10 Closed Family System Earnshaws Nelly Cathy Hindley Joseph

11 Psyco-analytic Criticism
Amoral Trans-generational Addiction SCAPE-GOATING Gambling INVALIDISM Mortgages ANOREXIA

12 Character Considerations
Closed Family System Wuthering Heights Focus on the family rather than the individual on isolation Temper their love to detach from the family destruction Victims, triangulation, and scapegoating Bildungsroman focus on Cathy & Heathcliff Contrast to Romanticism in many ways The disappearance of God in literature so the focus is on human relationships as substitutes Shift in focus could signify pre-oedipal focus on mother to father; eventually allows the integration of “self” again

13 Character Considerations
Bildungsroman Byronic Hero Vs. Anti-Hero Mostly about a single individual’s growth within the context of a defined social order The growth is somewhat a quest story Some form of loss or discontent jars the character away from home Process of maturity is long, arduous, and full of repeated clashes between desires and social order that is unbending Spirit and values of the social order become a part of the character and the protagonist then becomes a part of society Antithesis of a hero Considered incompetent, unlucky, tactless, clumsy…

14


Download ppt "Thematic & Structural Considerations"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google