Wuthering Heights

Paperback, 372 pages

English language

Published April 13, 1998 by Oxford University Press, Oxford University Press, USA.

ISBN:
978-0-19-283354-9
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OCLC Number:
492739138

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3 stars (11 reviews)

'If all else perished and he remained, I should still continue to be .. e' The haunting intensity of Catherine Earnshaw's attachment to Heathcliff is the focus of a novel in which relations between men and women are described with an emotional and imaginative power unparalleled in English fiction.

First published in 1847, Wuthering Heights is set on the bleak Yorkshire moors, where the drama of Catherine and Heathcliff, Heathcliff's cruel revenge against Edgar and Isabella Linton, and the promise of redemption through the next generation is enacted.

• INTRODUCTION • TEXTUAL NOTE • CHRONOLOGY • GENEALOGICAL TABLE • DEFINITIVE CLARENDON EDITION TEXT • APPENDICES • EXPLANATORY NOTES --back cover

200 editions

reviewed Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë (Oxford world's classics)

Review of 'Wuthering Heights' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

Until 3/4 of the way through I was highly tempted to dismiss this book with a two word review: "Histrionic nonsense." At about that point, however, I was struck by a resemblance to a superficially altogether different genre of literature - no, not the oft noted influence of the wildly popular only a few decades previously, Gothick novel - but a genre I have never heard mentioned in relation to Emily Bronte: Greek Tragedy.

The overwrought, intense, oppressive insanity of almost all the principal characters, the death of one of them at the half-way point, the feeling that everything is going according to the demented will of some external force out to amuse itself, the violently destructive internal relations of a family, all speak to me of the tone and temper of those plays about people such as Oedipus, Electra and Cassandra. To me this explains the histrionics, cruelty, structure …

Subjects

  • Triangles (Interpersonal relations) -- Fiction
  • Rejection (Psychology) -- Fiction
  • Rural families -- Fiction
  • Foundlings -- Fiction
  • Yorkshire (England) -- Fiction