Nature And Nature In Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights

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Emily Bronte’s novel, Wuthering Heights, is filled with many controversial psychological conflicts. The main psychological dispute in the novel is whether Heathcliff’s wicked nature was formed from birth (nature) or whether it was created from the environment that he grew up in and all of the abuse that he suffered at the hands of Hindley (nurture). Everyone is born innocent. It is their environment and their actions that cause them to truly be evil. The same can be said about Heathcliff. His corrupted character was because of his surroundings and experiences, not because he was born evil. Heathcliff was an orphan, growing up in a household in which no one enjoyed his presence. The background in which he grew up in was not the ideal household. Heathcliff’s dark character can also be explained through psychological references such as Sigmund Freud’s id, ego, and superego. Being that he is the id, Heathcliff’s personality represents the most basic desires of a human.
Heathcliff was not immoral whilst growing up. It had taken devastating events during his life that caused him to be the way that he is. Heathcliff had been abandoned as a child. No one knows what became of his parents and why he was an orphan. All that is known is that he was a gypsy child on the streets of Liverpool without parents. Being an orphan, Heathcliff held neither family ties nor status nor land. Heathcliff was thought to be at the bottom of the food chain, yet Mr. Earnshaw had taken Heathcliff in as his own child. Heathcliff was the favored child of Mr. Earnshaw. Being as he was the adopted child, yet Mr. Earnshaw’s favorite, both Hindley and Catherine envied Heathcliff. Catherine had overcome her initial jealousy and became Heathcliff’s friend and eventual ...

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...f was missing what Edgar Linton had, the superego. This had led to Catherin’s interest in Edgar and ultimately helped her make her choice between the two men.
Heathcliff is a character in the novel whose personality is the center of the dispute between the psychological nature vs. nurture. Emily Bronte’s novel, Wuthering Heights, contains many controversial psychological conflicts, the main of which was the argument about Heathcliff’s wicked nature and how it was formed. Whether his wickedness was from his own personal nature or from how he was nurtured. Heathcliff was an orphan, growing up in a household in which no one enjoyed his presence. Heathcliff’s dark character can also be explained through psychological references such as Sigmund Freud’s id, ego, and superego. Being that he is the id, Heathcliff’s personality represents the most basic desires of a human.

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