Literator (Aug 2017)

Cathy’s mourning in Emily Brontë’s <i>Wuthering Heights</i>

  • J. Albert Myburgh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4102/lit.v38i1.1359
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 38, no. 1
pp. e1 – e9

Abstract

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In Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights, illness and death cause characters to foresee, fear and react to other characters’ deaths. In this article, I explore the significance of Cathy’s anticipatory mourning of, and response to, the eventual actual deaths of her ailing father, Edgar, and her sickly cousin, Linton. Core 19th-century perspectives and fears relating to illness and death are both evident and contested in the representation of Cathy’s anxiety and suffering. I also investigate how Cathy’s grief is exacerbated by and affects the behaviour of other characters, notably Nelly, Linton, Heathcliff, Zillah and Hareton. The depiction of these characters’ responses to Cathy’s misery enriches their portrayal, implying that Cathy’s fear and grief are integral to both the novel’s plot and its character development.

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