“Wuthering Heights” and Emily Brontë: A Withdrawn Girl’s Turbulent Inner World Cover Image

„Оркански висови“ и Емили Бронте: буран унутрашњи свет једне тихе девојке
“Wuthering Heights” and Emily Brontë: A Withdrawn Girl’s Turbulent Inner World

Author(s): Nataša Gojković
Subject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Novel, Comparative Study of Literature, Philology, British Literature
Published by: Филолошки факултет Универзитета у Бањој Луци
Keywords: Emily Brontë; “Wuthering Heights”; literary precocity; isolation; governess; pre-experience age; experiential age;

Summary/Abstract: This paper represents an attempt at finding bonds between Emily Brontë’s world and her only novel in order to depict the lasting intriguing quality of Wuthering Heights in the light of four dualities considered to be at the same time the causes and effects of certain fenomena and issues in the novel and in Emily Brontë’s life. Furthermore, the attempt is made at proving that precisely the sense of dual belonging leads towards the painful sense of not belonging anywhere at all. Emily Brontë’s specifi c way of neutralising this is also depicted. On the basis of Terry Eagleton’s and Winifred Gérin’s conclusions on the literary precocity of the Brontë sisters as one that enabled every piece of their writing to be characterised as a complete work of art, the topic of the paper is seen through the prism of the first two dualities: Emily Brontë as a child-writer and as an unusually well-educated lower middle class governess to be. The other two dualities concern Emily as a female writer in a strictly male world and her cosmopolite education interlaced with her strong sense of belonging to the local community. The concluding part of the paper reveals that all dualities merge into a unique feeling described by Svetozar Koljević in his evaluation of Emily Brontë’s life and work.

  • Issue Year: 2015
  • Issue No: 11
  • Page Range: 254-263
  • Page Count: 10
  • Language: Serbian