Self Betrayal: Marxist and Psychoanalytic Analyses of Emily Brontë’s "Wuthering Heights"
Abstract
This essay is a Marxist and Psychoanalytic approach to Emily Brontë’s "Wuthering Heights".
The protagonists Heathcliff and Catherine are dealt with in terms of self-betrayal that bring
economic well-being but can shatter the psychic integrity of the whole personality. Heathcliff
shows symptoms of abandonment neurosis transforming natural life energies into destructive
urges against his external world when Catherine marries for social status. Her death drive is
re-directed inwards when she no longer can have a relationship with Heathcliff and they both
perish in a life denying psychotic state. Their intense union is based on their common preoedipal
personalities, and they can only be reunited in death.
Degree
Student essay
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Date
2012-04-27Author
Karjohn, Erika
Keywords
Wuthering Heights
Marxism
Psychoanalysis
self-betrayal
abandonment
death-drive
Series/Report no.
magisteruppsats i engelska
SPL 2011-091
Language
eng