Monday, September 2, 2019
Oppressiveness of Society Exposed in Emily Jane Brontes Wuthering Heights :: Emily Jane Brontes Wuthering Heights
Oppressiveness of Society Exposed in Emily Jane Bronte's Wuthering Heights      Wuthering Heights, the creation of Emily Jane Bronte, depicts not a  fantasy realm nor the depths of hell.  Rather, the novels focuses on  two main characters' battle with the restrictions of Victorian  Society.  Societal pressures and restrictive cultural confines exile  Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff from the world and then from each  other.      The story commences in the desolate moors of Yorkshire, home of  the estate Wuthering Heights.  True to its setting, the novel develops  Catherine and Heathcliff as mischievous children who wander the  isolated bogs, separating themselves from the activities of Wuthering  Heights.  Catherine^s childhood exile stems from her lack of compliance  with the rules concerning the conduct of a Victorian lady.  As a child,  her father was too ill to reprimand the free spirited child, ^who was  too mischievous and wayward for a favourite.^(33).  Therefore,  Catherine grew up among nature and lacked the sophistication of high  society.  Catherine removed herself from society and,  "had ways with her such as I never saw a child take up  before; she put all of us past our patience  fifty times and oftener in a day;...we had not a minute^s security  that she wouldn^t be in mischief.  Her spirits were always at  high-water mark, her tongue always going--singing, laughing, and  plaguing everyone who would not do the same.  A wild, wicked slip  she was--"(37).  Catherine further disregarded social standards and  remained friends with Heathcliff despite his degradation by Hindley,  her brother.  ^Miss Cathy and he [Heathcliff] were now very thick;^(33)  and she found her sole enjoyment in his companionship.  Catherine grew  up beside Heathcliff, ^in the fields.  They both promised to grow up as  rude as savages; the young master [Hindley] being entirely negligent  how they behaved,^(40-41).  During her formative years Catherine^s  conduct did not reflect that of a young Lady, ^and one of their chief  amusements [was] to run away to the moors in the morning and remain  there all day,^(41).  Thus, Catherine^s behavior developed and rejected  the ideals of an oppressive, over-bearing society, which in turn  created an isolation from the institutionalized world.  The two existed  on their private island unchecked until Catherine suffers an injury  from the Linton^s bulldog.  Forced to remain at Thrushcross Grange, the  Linton^s home, after her injury, isolates Catherine from Heathcliff and  her former world of reckless freedom.  Living amongst the elegance of  the Lintons transforms Catherine from a coarse youth into a delicate  lady.  However, sublimation into Victorian society does not fit her    					    
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