Emily Brontë: Wuthering Heights |
Contents
Charlotte Brontës Editors Preface | 10 |
Lockwood language and the feminine | 18 |
Order and instability | 39 |
Chronologies and deviations | 47 |
Location and dislocation | 59 |
The meanings of Wuthering Heights | 70 |
The afterlife of Wuthering Heights | 106 |
Guide to further reading | 128 |
Common terms and phrases
adult allowed Anne appears asked assumes become Bell born Branwell brother called Catherine Catherine's Cathy Cathy's chapter characters Charlotte Brontë Charlotte's child childhood close critics dead death desire Despite diary dies dream earlier Earnshaw Edgar Emily Brontë Emily's entry eyes father feels female fiction figure final ghost girl Grange hand Hareton Heathcliff Hindley identity imagination interest Isabella Jane Joseph language later Linton living Lockwood look lost male meanings mind mother narrative nature Nelly Nelly Dean Nelly's never noted Notice novel once opening play poems possession Preface prefers reader reality relation remains resemblance resistance Romantic seems sense separation sexual shape shared similar sister social soon story suggests tells tion tries Victorian wants Whereas woman writer Wuthering Heights young