Catherine Earnshaw: Female or Fiend? Catherine Earnshaw: Female or Fiend?

Catherine Earnshaw: Female or Fiend‪?‬

Emily Brontë's protagonist and her implications in "Wuthering Heights"

    • $23.99
    • $23.99

Publisher Description

The character of Catherine Earnshaw is one of the most complex and fascinating in world literature. Her story is that of a young woman who “betrays her deepest self and so destroys herself” but whose love is so strong that not even death can extinguish it. Readers cannot help but be moved by her fate, even though she appears to be a thoroughly unpleasant person in more than just one respect. They are forced to pity her, even though they feel they have every reason to believe that it is her, and her alone, who is to blame for the misery that befalls her. And, worst of all, they see her suffering and dying, but at the same time they cannot help envying her ability to feel as strongly as she does.
These confusing and seemingly contradictory impressions have led many critics of the novel to describe Catherine using terms like “creature of another species, hysterical, savage or demonic” out of a sheer inability to make anything else of her, anything that they could understand. In this paper, I shall attempt to determine whether these “otherwordly” terms that reek of madness and hell are really necessary or whether it might not be possible to do without them and see Catherine simply as a young woman in a very 18th/19th-century dilemma, a girl who marries the wrong man and ends up heartbroken.
I will begin by attempting a characterization of Catherine and then introducing her author, Emily Brontë, to have a closer look at the world and the mind that Catherine is rooted in.
Finally I will try to discover the true nature of Catherine’s dilemma and whether all these aspects will make it possible to demystify Catherine and return her to the state of a human being.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2011
July 6
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
14
Pages
PUBLISHER
GRIN Verlag
SELLER
GRIN Verlag GmbH
SIZE
169.1
KB

More Books Like This

Private Sphere to World Stage from Austen to Eliot Private Sphere to World Stage from Austen to Eliot
2017
Women and ‘Value’ in Jane Austen’s Novels Women and ‘Value’ in Jane Austen’s Novels
2017
Margaret Drabble Margaret Drabble
2019
For Better, For Worse For Better, For Worse
2017
Reviews of "Wuthering Heights" Reviews of "Wuthering Heights"
2005
Charlotte Brontë's World of Death Charlotte Brontë's World of Death
2014

More Books by Sarah Jost

Five First Chances Five First Chances
2023
Les bébés éléphants peuvent eux aussi mourir d'amour Les bébés éléphants peuvent eux aussi mourir d'amour
2023
The Estate The Estate
2024
Formen und Funktionen des Monologs in William Shakespeares "Hamlet" Formen und Funktionen des Monologs in William Shakespeares "Hamlet"
2012
Zeitkritik in William Blakes „Songs  of Innocence and of Experience“ Zeitkritik in William Blakes „Songs  of Innocence and of Experience“
2009