Home / English and Literary Studies / The element of para gothicism charlotte bronte's jane eyre and emily bronte's wuthering heights

The element of para gothicism charlotte bronte's jane eyre and emily bronte's wuthering heights

 

Table Of Contents


Thesis Abstract

Thesis Overview

<p> </p><p><strong>The English Gothic Novel: A Brief Overview</strong>&nbsp;According to Oates (2003), The English Gothic novel began with Horace Walpole’s <em>The Castle of Otranto</em>&nbsp;(1765), which was enormously popular and quickly imitated by other novelists and soon became a recognizable genre. To most modern readers, however, <em>The Castle of Otranto</em>&nbsp; is dull reading; except for the villain Manfred, the characters are insipid and flat; the action moves at a fast clip with no emphasis or suspense, despite the supernatural manifestations and a young maiden’s flight through dark vaults. But contemporary readers found the novel electrifyingly original and thrillingly suspenseful, with its remote setting, its use of the supernatural, and its medieval trappings, all of which have been so frequently imitated and so poorly imitated that they have become stereotypes. The genre takes its name from Otranto’s medieval–or Gothic–setting; early Gothic novelists tended to set their novels in remote times like the Middle Ages and in remote places like Italy (Matthew Lewis’s The Monk, 1796) or the Middle East (William Beckford’s Vathek, 1786). What makes a work Gothic is a combination of at least some of these elements:</p><ol><li>A castle, ruined or intact, haunted or not (the castle plays such a key role that it has been called the main character of the Gothic novel),</li><li>Ruined buildings which are sinister or which arouse a pleasing melancholy, dungeons, underground passages, crypts, and catacombs which, in modern houses, become spooky basements or attics,</li><li>Labyrinths, dark corridors, and winding stairs,</li><li>Shadows, a beam of moonlight in the blackness, a flickering candle, or the only source of light failing (a candle blown out or, today, an electric failure),</li><li>Extreme landscapes, like rugged mountains, thick forests, or icy wastes, and extreme weather,</li><li>Omens and ancestral curses,</li><li>Magic, supernatural manifestations, or the suggestion of the supernatural,</li><li>A passion-driven, willful villain-hero or villain,</li><li>A curious heroine with a tendency to faint and a need to be rescued–frequently,</li><li>A hero whose true identity is revealed by the end of the novel,</li><li>Horrifying (or terrifying) events or the threat of such happenings.</li></ol><p>The Gothic creates feelings of gloom, mystery, and suspense and tends to the dramatic and the sensational, like incest, diabolism, necrophilia, and nameless terrors. It crosses boundaries, daylight and the dark, life and death, consciousness and unconsciousness (Henessy, 1978). Sometimes covertly, sometimes explicitly, it presents transgression, taboos, and fears–fears of violation, of imprisonment, of social chaos, and of emotional collapse. Most of us immediately recognize the Gothic (even if we don’t know the name) when we encounter it in novels, poetry, plays, movies, and TV series. For some of us–and I include myself– safely experiencing dread or horror is thrilling and enjoyable. Elements of the Gothic have made their way into mainstream writing. They are found in Sir Walter Scott’s novels, Charlotte Brontë’s <em>Jane Eyre</em>, and Emily Brontë’s <em>Wuthering Heights</em>&nbsp; and in Romantic poetry like Samuel Coleridge’s “Christabel,” Lord Byron’s “The Giaour,” and John Keats’s “The Eve of St. Agnes.” A tendency to the macabre and bizarre which appears in writers like William Faulkner, Truman Capote, and Flannery O’Connor has been called Southern Gothic (Henessy, 1978).</p><p><strong><em>Wuthering Heights</em></strong><strong>&nbsp;as a Victorian Novel</strong>&nbsp;<em>Wuthering Heights</em>&nbsp;is in the same ethical and moral tradition as the other great Victorian novels. Its criticism of society is as fierce as Charlotte Bronte’s or Dickens’ [Much] of the same spirit interfuses the novels of Charlotte and Emily Bronte. For both writers, society and what passes for civilization are synonymous with selfishness. Both show family life as a sort of open warfare, a deadly struggle for money and power. Both see organized religion as ineffective or hypocritical or so cold and harsh as to be inhumane and deflected from true Christian ideals. The characters in Charlotte Bronte’s first two novels have to face many of the same problems confronting the characters in <em>Wuthering Heights,</em>&nbsp;and they reach the same conclusions. Both William Crimsworth (in <em>The Professor</em>) and Jane Eyre reject the master-slave relationship as static and stultifying and come to the teacher-pupil relationship as the one that allows for growth and the fulfillment of human potential. Similarly, Catherine Linton and Hareton Earnshaw see the futility of Heathcliff’s desire for revenge and domination (his seeing the world solely in terms of the master-slave relationship when love fails him) and affirm civilization and civilized values in terms of the teacher-pupil relationship.</p> <br><p></p>

Blazingprojects Mobile App

📚 Over 50,000 Project Materials
📱 100% Offline: No internet needed
📝 Over 98 Departments
🔍 Project Journal Publishing
🎓 Undergraduate/Postgraduate
📥 Instant Whatsapp/Email Delivery

Blazingprojects App

Related Research

English and Literary. 4 min read

The Representation of Identity in Postcolonial Literature...

The research project titled "The Representation of Identity in Postcolonial Literature" aims to explore and analyze the various ways in which identity...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
English and Literary. 3 min read

Exploring the Portrayal of Gender Roles in Contemporary African Literature...

The project titled "Exploring the Portrayal of Gender Roles in Contemporary African Literature" aims to delve into the representation and depiction of...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
English and Literary. 2 min read

The Representation of Gender in Contemporary African Literature...

The project titled "The Representation of Gender in Contemporary African Literature" aims to explore and analyze the portrayal of gender in literary w...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
English and Literary. 2 min read

Exploring the Use of Magical Realism in Contemporary African Literature...

The project, titled "Exploring the Use of Magical Realism in Contemporary African Literature," delves into the intricate relationship between magical ...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
English and Literary. 3 min read

Exploring the Use of Magical Realism in Contemporary English Literature...

The project titled "Exploring the Use of Magical Realism in Contemporary English Literature" aims to delve into the widespread practice of employing m...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
English and Literary. 3 min read

Exploring the Portrayal of Mental Health in Contemporary Literature: A Comparative A...

The research project, "Exploring the Portrayal of Mental Health in Contemporary Literature: A Comparative Analysis," delves into the depiction of ment...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
English and Literary. 3 min read

The Influence of Cultural Identity on Narrative Voice in Contemporary African Litera...

The research project titled "The Influence of Cultural Identity on Narrative Voice in Contemporary African Literature" delves into the intricate relat...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
English and Literary. 3 min read

The Representation of Gender in Contemporary African Literature...

The project titled "The Representation of Gender in Contemporary African Literature" seeks to explore and analyze the portrayal of gender roles, stere...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
English and Literary. 3 min read

Exploring the Theme of Identity in Contemporary African Literature...

The research project, titled "Exploring the Theme of Identity in Contemporary African Literature," delves into the intricate exploration of identity a...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
WhatsApp Click here to chat with us