Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights

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Emily Bronte was born in 1818 and published Wuthering Heights in 1847. Wuthering Heights, reflects her experience with both the Romantic Era, which existed from 1785 to 1830, and the Victorian Era, which took place from 1830 to 1848. Romantics placed high importance on the individual, nature and human emotion. The Victorian Era, in turn, was a reaction to the Romantic period. The Victorians had a sense of social responsibility, which set them apart from the Romantics. Wuthering Heights exemplifies both periods with its presentation of a natural, all-encompassing love between Heathcliff and Catherine, encased by the pressures of social rank, responsibility and economics. Bronte’s novel presents a strong criticism of the shallow values upheld by the members of society. By examining Wuthering Heights from a socio-economic stance, one can conclude that the limitations of society and economics have a destructive, dehumanizing, and controlling effect on the individual.
In the relationship presented between Heathcliff and Catherine, human emotion and a deeply rooted ontological passion, compete with the ever present forces of society and economics. As children, both Heathcliff and Catherine defy societal norms by running wild in the moors. Their relationship becomes so strong that, at a major turning point in the novel, Catherine declares, “I am Heathcliff.” (Bronte 82) However, after her stay at the Linton’s, Catherine returns as a “dignified person” (Bronte 53). Despite the fact that she loves Heathcliff, Catherine choses to marry Edgar Linton because it will raise her position in society. Catherine’s decision to marry Edgar Linton serves as the main “catalyst of tragedy” (Eagleton 3). Her choice is rooted in her selfish desire to a...

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...estruction” (Bronte 312). Eighteen years post Catherine’s death, Heathcliff dies from self-starvation. Their love for each other can only exist fully in death because society prevents it from existing in life. The idea that their love must transcend life itself in order to exist connects to the constrictive and controlling influence societal pressures have on human emotion and the individual.
By presenting the ill-fated, all-encompassing love constricted by society between Heathcliff and Catherine, Bronte manages to convey that it is important to value human emotion, love and freedom over society. Choosing to value superficial and materialistic aspects of life over the natural, emotional aspects can result in living an empty and meaningless life. If one allows for the pressures of society to consume them, the result can be dehumanizing and destructive to the soul.

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