Wuthering Heights
Emily Brontë's 1847 only novel — passion, revenge, and the Yorkshire moors
Tradition: Mid-Victorian English Romantic-gothic fiction
Emily Brontë's 1847 only novel — passion, revenge, and the Yorkshire moors
Wuthering Heights is Emily Brontë's 1847 only novel, published the year before her death at age 30. The orphan Heathcliff, brought from Liverpool to the Earnshaw farmhouse Wuthering Heights, becomes the soul-companion of Catherine Earnshaw; their thwarted love (when Catherine marries the gentleman Edgar Linton) generates Heathcliff's consuming revenge across two generations of the Earnshaw, Linton, and Heathcliff families. Narrated in a frame structure through Lockwood and Nelly Dean, the novel's passionate intensity and structural intricacy were ahead of their time. Foundational for the Romantic-gothic novel tradition.
Editions cited
- Wuthering Heights (Thomas Cautley Newby, 1847); ed. Helen Small (Oxford World's Classics, 2008); Norton Critical edn ed. Richard Dunn (4th edn 2003)
School Embodiments
Tragic structure across two generations.
"Tragic structure." (Wuthering Heights)
Anglican-evangelical context (subverted).
"Subverted Anglican." (Wuthering Heights)
Internal Tensions
Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights: foundational for Romantic-gothic fiction; central reference for the long literary tradition of passionate intensity.
I. Time
The two-generational time of revenge.
Attributes
II. Space
The Yorkshire moors and Wuthering Heights.
Attributes
III. Matter
The embodied passionate self.
Attributes
IV. Observer
Lockwood and Nelly Dean as frame narrators.
Attributes
V. Energy
Energies of love and revenge.
Attributes
VI. Information
The diary-fragments and oral narrations.
Attributes
Personas with the nearest attribute fingerprint
Historical figures whose own classification on the same six-dimensional grid lands closest to this work's. Computed by attribute-agreement on coordinates both address.
Computed school proximity
The work's attribute fingerprint scored against all schools using the same quiz scorer. Useful as a sanity check on the hand-curated embodiments above.
How Wuthering Heights resolves each dilemma
25 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 6 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way · 32 unaligned.
Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.
Time · 9 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.