Sunday, January 20, 2013

I still don't remember this book very well...


2007. In many works of literature, past events can affect, positively or negatively, the present activities, attitudes, or values of a character. Choose a novel or play in which a character must contend with some aspect of the past, either personal or societal. Then write an essay in which you show how the character's relationship to the past contributes to the meaning of the work as a whole.

      In the novel Wuthering Heights, Emily Brontë introduces the characters in the present, but she does not stay there for long. The majority of the book is a retelling of a story from the past that eventually helps the reader understand Heathcliff. His relationship with the past leaves him bitter and, arguably, insane.
      In the beginning of Wuthering Heights, Mr. Lockwood arrives at the home of Heathcliff. The reader, and. Mr. Lockwood himself, is left wondering why Heathcliff is distant and bitter. Mr. Lockwood acts on his curiosity and asks a house maid, Nelly, to tell him Heathcliff’s story. As she tells the story throughout the novel, the reader concludes that all of Heathcliff’s faults seem to start with his poor relationship with his adoptive brother Hareton, and reach a peak with Catherine choosing Edgar.
      Although he loves Catherine, Heathcliff has a poor relationship with her brother Hareton. Because their father treated Heathcliff as if he were his own son, Hareton takes his anger out on Heathcliff, constantly bullying him and treating him as less of a person. This leads to Heathcliff’s actions later in the novel when he comes back to their house and wins the inheritance from Hareton as part of his revenge. The last straw for Heathcliff is when he overhears Catherine tell Nelly that she couldn’t possibly marry him. He runs away and is a completely different person upon his return later in the novel. From the moment he returns, Heathcliff tries to get Catherine to chose him, even though she’s already married to Edgar. Heathcliff is no longer just a boy with a crush, he’s a man who will do just about anything to get the revenge he wants.
      As part of his revenge, Heathcliff marries Isabella Linton and puts himself in line to inherit her family’s property. This marriage, having nothing to do love, is doomed from the start. Heathcliff treats Isabella so poorly, she flees to London, where she raises their son alone. After she dies and their son, Linton, returns to live with his father, it is clear that Heathcliff has no intentions of treating him the way a father should treat his son. To Heathcliff, Linton is just another reminder that he didn’t get Catherine. Because Linton isn’t Heathcliff and Catherine’s son, he means next to nothing to Heathcliff.
      The novel comes full circle when Nelly’s story catches up to the present. Mr. Lockwood and the reader both now understand why Heathcliff is bitter, and why the others in the house are reserved. Heathcliff’s relationship to his past is what sets the plot for the entire novel, providing for different characters to get involved in various ways as he seeks his revenge for the love he lost.

2 comments:

  1. This post was good but I feel like you summarized A LOT. It's really hard to not over-summarize (I can't quite figure out how to do it yet). You were able to include a lot of really good detail and answered the prompt question but it tends to get a little wordy. But besides that, nice job!

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  2. I definitely agree with Sam. However, the prompt didn't say not to summarize the work. Even still, I would recommend cutting back on the summarizing and connecting the evidence more often to your thesis. It may help to have a claim at the beginning of each paragraph that supports your thesis.

    Noah Symanzik

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