Wuthering Heights Analysis

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Wuthering Heights is a complicated romantic novel based on the love of Heathcliff and Catherine. Most parts of the novel are hard to comprehend, because most of the characters do what you least expect them to do. There are two different themes, the destruction of a love never changed and social status; motifs include doubles, or couples and repetition of events; symbols include moors and ghosts. The destruction of a love never changed refers to Catherine and Heathcliff. They weren’t your typical love story characters. In fact their love was so strong that they believed that they were soul mates even though they married two different people, and ended up being in-laws. Before Catherine died she declared that she “was Heathcliff” meaning that he was her soul mate but chose Edgar because she wanted a high rank in status and was told Heathcliff would bring her down. When Catherine died, Heathcliff declared that he couldn’t live without his soul meaning Catherine. When Young Catherine and Hareton begin to fall in love, it changed the story irrevocably. Their love changed both families and estates and everything was restored back to order. Ultimately, Wuthering Heights presents a vision of life as a process of change, and celebrates this process over and against the romantic intensity of its principal characters. Social Status was huge in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century British society. At the top of British society was the royalty, followed by the aristocracy, then by the gentry, and then by the lower classes, who made up the vast majority of the population. The gentry, or upper middle class, possessed servants and often large estates, but held a fragile social position. The social status of aristocrats was a formal and settled matter, because aristocrats had official titles. Members of the gentry held no titles, and their status could change. A man
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