Description

Book Synopsis
Critics often comment on the importance of landscape in Wuthering Heights, and in this edition, Christopher Heywood locates the text more precisely than previous editions amid Yorkshire’s limestone north and moorland south, drawing out the importance of the region's slaveholding society. Heywood also makes an important contribution to scholarship arguing persuasively for a re-structuring of the chapter and section breaks. Finally, this edition includes a variety of appendices that help to illuminate the novel’s historical background.

Trade Review
Christopher Heywood invites us to take a fresh look at this oft-interpreted novel, throwing new light on its literary ancestry, and providing a wealth of material about the 'plantation economy' of northern England in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. His introduction situates the work firmly in its place and time, putting particular emphasis on the complex of family and social histories out of which Bronte wove her story. In Heywood's provocative reading, Heathcliff sheds the demonic aura with which he is invested by other critics, and takes on tragic dimensions, becoming 'a martyr and hero of social change.' This Broadview edition of Wuthering Heights makes a valuable contribution to the continuing debate about the origins, structure, and meaning of one of the greatest—and most enigmatic—novels in English." - Herbert Rosengarten, University of British Columbia

Table of Contents

Preface
Abbreviations
Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
Emily Brontë: A Brief Chronology

Introduction

  1. The Wuthering Heights landscape
  2. The story: symmetry
  3. The marriage prohibition
  4. Lockwood’s Wilberforcean dreams
  5. Africa and Yorkshire unchained
  6. Signs of fertility
  7. Note on the text

Wuthering Heights

Appendix A: The Chronology of Wuthering Heights
Appendix B: Literary Tradition
Appendix C: Family Histories
Appendix D: Documents

  1. Landscape
    1. John Hutton, Tour to the Caves (1781)
  2. Emancipation
    1. John Woolman, Journal (1776)
    2. John Woolman, Some Considerations on the Keeping of Negroes (1754)
  3. Slavery
    1. ‘The Sorrows of Yamba’
    2. Robert Brougham (1778-1868),‘On the Immediate Emancipation of Negro Apprentices’
  4. Blacks in England
    1. ‘Samboo’s Tomb’ (1822)
  5. Slavery in Yorkshire
    1. The Leeds Mercury, 1831
  6. Image of the Rocks
    1. Adam Sedgwick (1785-1873)
  7. The Brontës in Ireland
    1. Alice Brontës Interview

Select Bibliography

Wuthering Heights

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    A Paperback / softback by Emily Brontë, Christopher Heywood

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      View other formats and editions of Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë

      Publisher: Broadview Press Ltd
      Publication Date: 30/12/2001
      ISBN13: 9781551112473, 978-1551112473
      ISBN10: 1551112477

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Critics often comment on the importance of landscape in Wuthering Heights, and in this edition, Christopher Heywood locates the text more precisely than previous editions amid Yorkshire’s limestone north and moorland south, drawing out the importance of the region's slaveholding society. Heywood also makes an important contribution to scholarship arguing persuasively for a re-structuring of the chapter and section breaks. Finally, this edition includes a variety of appendices that help to illuminate the novel’s historical background.

      Trade Review
      Christopher Heywood invites us to take a fresh look at this oft-interpreted novel, throwing new light on its literary ancestry, and providing a wealth of material about the 'plantation economy' of northern England in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. His introduction situates the work firmly in its place and time, putting particular emphasis on the complex of family and social histories out of which Bronte wove her story. In Heywood's provocative reading, Heathcliff sheds the demonic aura with which he is invested by other critics, and takes on tragic dimensions, becoming 'a martyr and hero of social change.' This Broadview edition of Wuthering Heights makes a valuable contribution to the continuing debate about the origins, structure, and meaning of one of the greatest—and most enigmatic—novels in English." - Herbert Rosengarten, University of British Columbia

      Table of Contents

      Preface
      Abbreviations
      Acknowledgements
      List of Illustrations
      Emily Brontë: A Brief Chronology

      Introduction

      1. The Wuthering Heights landscape
      2. The story: symmetry
      3. The marriage prohibition
      4. Lockwood’s Wilberforcean dreams
      5. Africa and Yorkshire unchained
      6. Signs of fertility
      7. Note on the text

      Wuthering Heights

      Appendix A: The Chronology of Wuthering Heights
      Appendix B: Literary Tradition
      Appendix C: Family Histories
      Appendix D: Documents

      1. Landscape
        1. John Hutton, Tour to the Caves (1781)
      2. Emancipation
        1. John Woolman, Journal (1776)
        2. John Woolman, Some Considerations on the Keeping of Negroes (1754)
      3. Slavery
        1. ‘The Sorrows of Yamba’
        2. Robert Brougham (1778-1868),‘On the Immediate Emancipation of Negro Apprentices’
      4. Blacks in England
        1. ‘Samboo’s Tomb’ (1822)
      5. Slavery in Yorkshire
        1. The Leeds Mercury, 1831
      6. Image of the Rocks
        1. Adam Sedgwick (1785-1873)
      7. The Brontës in Ireland
        1. Alice Brontës Interview

      Select Bibliography

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