Emily Bront : Wuthering HeightsPatsy Stoneman A guide to and excerpts from the critical commentary on the only novel this particular Brontd (1818-48) published. Stoneman (English, U. of Hull) arranges the commentary into sections on Victorian responses: power, propriety, and poetry; the rise and fall of the author: humanism, formalism, deconst |
Contents
Victorian Responses Power Propriety and Poetry | 7 |
The Rise and Fall of the Author Humanism Formalism Deconstruction | 28 |
NOTES | 180 |
A BRIEF GUIDE TO FURTHER READING | 183 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | 185 |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS | 197 |
INDEX | 198 |
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Common terms and phrases
argues Arnold Kettle becomes Bersani biography Brontë's novel Catherine and Heathcliff Catherine Earnshaw Catherine's Cathy and Hareton Cathy's Cecil characters Charlotte Brontë child childhood context criticism of Wuthering culture death deconstruction desire discourse domestic dream Eagleton Edgar edition Edward Chitham elements Emily Brontë Emily Jane Brontë Emily's essay F. R. Leavis female feminist Feminist Criticism figure frame Freud Gilbert and Gubar Gothic Hillis Miller Hindley Homans human imagination Jane Eyre Juliet Barker Kermode Lacan language Leavis Linton literal literary literature Lockwood lover male Marxist masculine meaning metaphors Miller moors moral mother myth narrative narrator nature Nelly Dean Nelly's novelist passion poems psychoanalytic reader reading reality relation relationship represents reviewers Romantic scene Schorer sense sexual social society Stevie Davies story structuralist structure Sydney Dobell Terry Eagleton theory Thrushcross Grange tion Victorian vision woman women words writing Wuthering Heights