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Wuthering Heights - Ed. Newman

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Over a hundred and fifty years after its initial publication, Emily Bronts turbulent portrayal of the Earnshaws and the Lintons, two northern English households nearly destroyed by violent passions in the last quarter of the eighteenth century, continues to provoke and fascinate readers.

Heathcliff remains one of the best-known characters in the English novel, and Catherine Earnshaw's impossible choice between two rivals retains its appeal for contemporary readers.

At the same time, the novel's highly ambivalent representations of domesticity, its famous reticence about its characters and their actions, its formal features as a story within a story, and the mystery of Heathcliff's origins and identity provide material for classroom discussion at every level of study. The introduction and appendices to this Broadview edition, which place Bronts life and novel in the context of the developing "e;Bront myth,"e; explore the impact of industrialization on the people of Yorkshire, consider the novel's representation of gender, and survey the ways contemporary scholarship has sought to account for Heathcliff, open up multiple contexts within which Wuthering Heights can be read, understood, and enjoyed.

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£17.95
Product Details
Broadview Press
1460402197 / 9781460402191
eBook (EPUB)
11/04/2007
Canada
English
396 pages
Copy: 20%; print: 20%