【英语论文】维多利亚时期的小说《呼啸山庄》(英文).doc
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1、Wuthering Heights as a Victorian Novel维多利亚时期的小说呼啸山庄Wuthering Heights is in the same ethical and moral tradition as the other great Victorian novels. Its criticism of society is as fierce as Charlotte Brontes or Dickens. Much of the same spirit interfuses the novels of Charlotte and Emily Bronte. For
2、 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 C
3、hristian ideals. The characters in Charlotte Brontes first two novels have to face many of the same problems confronting the characters in Wuthering Heights, and they reach the same conclusions. Both William Crimsworth (in The Professor) and Jane Eyre reject the master-slave relationship as static a
4、nd 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 Heathcliffs desire for revenge and domination (his seeing the world solely in terms of the master-s
5、lave relationship when love fails him) and affirm civilization and civilized values in terms of the teacher-pupil relationship. At the outset Heathcliff is much like the orphans in other Victorian novels-Oliver Twist, or Jane Eyre, or Pip. He is alone, an outcast, as much an alien or interloper amon
6、g the Earnshaws as Jane Eyre is in Gateshead Hall. The family here is defined much as Charlotte Bronte portrays it in Jane Eyre or in her third novel, Shirley. First, the family closes against the stranger. Just as the Reeds fear Jane simply because she is different from everyone else and thus seems
7、 to pose a threat, so the Earnshaws are repelled by Heathcliffs appearance. He looks like a gypsy brat . and Mrs. Earnshaw is ready to fling him out of the house. Just as the Reeds force Jane to know her place by making her live with the servants, the Earnshaws attempt to dehumanize Heathcliff. He i
8、s an it to them . , an object, not a person. He is given a first name, not a last name, as though to emphasize that he can never be part of the family. Heathcliff is as much a discord among the Earnshaws as Jane Eyre is among the Reeds. The children are jealous of him. Old Mr. Earnshaw brought him h
9、ome instead of the presents they had expected. Hindley comes to regard his father as an oppressor because of Mr. Earnshaws concern for the orphan. He sees Heathcliff as a usurper of his parents affections and his privileges. . The choice of words here-oppressor, usurper, Hindleys persecuting the poo
10、r, fatherless child-indicates that this family is still very much a tribe, governed by power and the desire for money rather than by love. One is reminded of such other Victorian tribes as the Crawleys in Vanity Fair or the Yorkes in Shirley. Emily Bronte broadens her attack when she indicates the f
11、ailings of organized religion. In the Preface to the second edition of Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte criticizes those who confuse Christianity with sanctimoniousness: Conventionality is not morality. Self-righteousness is not religion. Christianity is not the same thing as self-interest: appearance sh
12、ould not be mistaken for truth; narrow human doctrines, that only tend to elate and magnify a few, should not be substituted for the world-redeeming creed of Christ. Preceding her sister in this sort of criticism, Emily Bronte in Wuthering Heights condemns the pharisaical servant, Joseph, who sees e
13、veryone damned except himself and uses his sermonizing and pious discoursing . as a way of gaining influence. Josephs religion is completely self-serving: he attacks those out of power in order to gain the approval of those in power. When Mr. Earnshaw is in control, he attacks Hindley. With Hindley
14、in charge, he attacks Heathcliff and Cathy. Finally, when Heathcliff takes over, Joseph savagely criticizes the younger generation. Among the masters, we find the same hypocrisy and the same perversion of religious values. Thus, in a telling choice of words, Emily Bronte points out that Hindleys par
15、adise is his selfish idyll with Frances at the hearth, while Heathcliff and Cathy are banished to the back kitchen. As Nelly indicates, Hindleys religion, like Josephs, is egocentric: he had room in his heart only for two idols-his wife and himself: he doted on both, and adored one. . Hindleys treat
16、ment of others follows the same selfish pattern as his religion. He is as consistent as the Brocklehursts in Jane Eyre, who enjoy all the luxuries of life themselves, while advocating Spartan austerity for the poor. The rest of the people of the novel emulate the Earnshaws in their selfishness and l
17、ack of sympathy. The Lintons presumably are good Christians, yet they are repelled by Heathcliff because he looks like a gypsy and therefore cannot be a member of their social class. Here one has only to think of Great Expectations or Vanity Fair to see that Emily Bronte is on the main road of Victo
18、rian social criticism, attacking those who judge others solely by surface appearances or money or birth. As Heathcliff bitterly notes when he tells the story later to Nelly, Cathy was a young lady and they the Lintons made a distinction between her treatment and mine. . The younger Lintons follow in
19、 the footsteps of the older generation. Isabella and Edgar are spoiled brats, like the young Earnshaws and the Reed children in Jane Eyre. They fight over their possessions. Worst of all, Edgar shows no real evidence of Christianity in his behavior toward Isabella. When his sister disobeys his order
20、s and runs off with Heathcliff, he cuts himself off from her and self-righteously blames her for his own inability to forgive: Trouble me no more about her. Hereafter she is only my sister in name, not because I disown her, but because she has disowned me. . Against this dark background . , the nove
21、list depicts the love between Heathcliff and Cathy. Rereading Wuthering Heights, one finds that love is presented in almost completely negative terms, set forth in opposition to society and its values, in a sense defined by those values. One cannot emphasize this fact enough. Heathcliff and Cathy do
22、 not exist in some dream-like vacuum; rather, they are the products of the world that Emily Bronte clearly describes in the first part of the novel. To a surprisingly large extent they share the values of that world, and the novelist, at least by implication, criticizes their actions. It is simply n
23、ot accurate to say as does Dorothy Van Ghent that their relationship is irrelevant to the social and moral reason. In the opening half of Wuthering Heights Emily Bronte shows how Cathys selfishness and her attempt to compromise with societys dictates keep her from fulfilling her love for Heathcliff.
24、 In the closing half she shows how Heathcliff, in his frustration and desire for revenge, becomes the unwitting tool of the world, embodying all of societys egoism and cruelty. Though Dorothy Van Ghent is correct when she states that both Heathcliff and Cathy reject ordinary concepts of human behavi
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