Saturday, April 25, 2020
Medea Essays (521 words) - British Films, English-language Films
  Medea    Literary Criticism Summary  According to the editor Currer Bell, the novel Wuthering Heights may seem rather   crude and unintelligible to those who know nothing of the author. Strangers who are   unacquainted with the setting where the story takes place, or who are unfamiliar with the customs   of the time may also look at Wuthering Heights with a critical eye. To all such Wuthering   Heights must appear a rude and strange production (Bell 5).   Readers may feel that the manners, language, and the very dwellings of the characters   are somewhat repulsive (Bell 5). People who are perhaps calm and collected will have no idea   what to make of the rough, strong utterance, the harshly manifested passions, the unbridled   aversions, and headlong partialities (Bell 5). Many people have been taught carefully to observe   the evenness of language and manner, and it is these people whom the roughness will shock .  The entire novel is regarded for its rusticity. It is moorish, and wild, and knotty as the   root of heath (Bell 5). However, Currer Bell insists that this is exactly the way the novel should   be. The author was a product of these wild and rustic moors, and it is quite natural that she writes   about what she lived in. Her descriptions, then, if natural scenery, are what they should be, and   all that they should be (Bell 6).  The author herself was not a very social person. She looked upon most   people with benevolence, but there were very few instances where she interacted with them on a   .  personal level. However, this did not stop her from accurately identifying the ways, language, and   family history of most people. She could hear of them with interest, and talk of them with detail,  minute, graphic,and accurate; but with them she barely exchanged a word (Bell 6-7). Her   imagination was dismal yet powerful.  Still, there are certain examples in Wuthering Heights that bring a sort of brightness to   the other dreary aspects of the novel. The character of Nelly Dean is an example of tenderness   and compassion. In the character of Edgar Linton one can see a sense of constancy and   thoughtfulness. Also, some glimpses of grace and gaiety animate the younger   Catherine (Bell 8). Even the first Catherine possesses strange sort of beauty in the midst of all   her intense passion.  Heathcliff possesses only one characteristic that shows he is in fact human. It is not his   love for Catherine, which is wild and fierce, but it is his, rudely confessed regard for Hareton   Earnshaw- the young man whom he has ruined; and his half -implied esteem for Nelly Dean   (Bell 8). If it weren't for these mere examples, we would look upon Heathcliff as a child purely of   corruption.  Wuthering Heights was a novel formed out of poor materials with simple tools, yet it   reflects an amazing sense of power. There was no model for it except the visions of the   author's mind. It took time and effort, but the novel took on a human form and there it stands   dark and mighty, radiating a sense of strength and charm.    English Essays    
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