Brigita Morkute, University of Iceland
2025
This thesis examines the role of the natural world in Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre, focusing on how Emily and Charlotte Brontë employ nature to explore forms of female subjectivity. It situates both novels within the Gothic tradition, a genre that historically offered women writers a mode for articulating female fears, desires, and constraints, often in encoded or symbolic ways. Modern feminist criticism has frequently turned to Gothic fiction for this reason, making the Brontës’ works especially productive sites for analysis. The study argues that Wuthering Heights presents the repression of Catherine Earnshaw-Linton through both its imagery and narrative form. Catherine’s confinement indoors, her limited access to the natural world, and the narrative’s reliance on the mediating voices of Nelly Dean and Mr. Lockwood collectively underscore her lack of agency within the patriarchal structures of the nineteenth century. The novel’s layered, external narration mirrors Catherine’s fragmented subjectivity, emphasizing how her inner life is misrepresented, silenced, or obscured. In contrast, Jane Eyre grants its heroine a first-person narrative voice, allowing Jane to articulate her psychological and moral development directly. Her recurrent movements away from oppressive environments mark the stages of her growing autonomy, and nature becomes a crucial ally in expressing, validating, and guiding her interior life. Whereas Catherine’s disconnection from the natural world signals her repression, Jane’s deep attunement to nature supports her journey toward self-determination. Both novels employ Gothic monster-figures to explore female subjectivity in different ways. In Jane Eyre, Bertha Mason’s death functions as a catalyst for Jane’s symbolic rebirth, while in Wuthering Heights, Catherine’s spectral return reveals that suppressed female agency resists containment even in death. Read together, the novels illuminate how the Brontës use nature and Gothic conventions to interrogate the possibilities and limitations of women’s autonomy in the Victorian era.
0 comments:
Post a Comment