"My name was Isabella Linton": Coverture, Domestic Violence, and Mrs. Heathcliff's Narrative in Wuthering Heights

被引:8
作者
Pike, Judith E. [1 ]
机构
[1] Salisbury Univ, Salisbury, MD 21801 USA
关键词
Emily Bronte; Wuthering Heights; narrative; marriage; domestic violence;
D O I
10.1525/ncl.2009.64.3.347
中图分类号
I [文学];
学科分类号
05 ;
摘要
While critics have scrutinized Emily Bronte's use of the framed narrative in Wuthering Heights (1847), raising questions about the reliability of the central narrators, Lockwood and Nelly Dean, scant attention has been paid to Isabella Heathcliff as the third narrator. Though readers have overlooked the importance of Isabella's narrative, Bronte highlights her narrative by including it as the only intact letter in the entire novel and devotes almost an entire chapter to her narrative. Isabella's narrative surfaces in a letter to Nelly Dean, offering a highly unorthodox portrait for the mid-Victorian period of the domestic abuse of a young bride from the gentry class. Isabella's letter, which comprises most of chapter 13, also becomes a critical tool to ferret out the reliability of Heathcliff's account in chapter 14 of their marriage. By analyzing the conflicting accounts of their marriage, this essay demonstrates that Heathcliff's argument acts as a carefully crafted legal rationale, based upon the laws of coverture, to defend and sanction the domestic confinement of his wife. While the laws of coverture deprived women of a legal and economic voice, Bronte endows Isabella with a complex and at times ironic voice. Bronte paints a powerful portrait of the radical transformation of Isabella from the pampered and infantile Miss Linton to the hardened Mrs. Heathcliff, ending with her as the intrepid, fugitive wife, Isabella Heathcliff. Bronte demonstrates through Isabella's story that as long as the laws of coverture are intact, companionate marriage is at risk of being exploited and compromised.
引用
收藏
页码:347 / 383
页数:37
相关论文
共 48 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1848, SPECTATOR
[2]  
Berry LauraC., 1999, The Child, the State, and the Victorian Novel
[3]  
BLACKSTONE W, HIST DIPLOMACY YALE, P1765
[4]  
BOOTH A, 2009, WUTHERING HEIGHTS, P123
[5]  
BRICK, 1959, COLL ENGL, V21, P80
[6]  
BRONT E, 1847, WUTHERING HEIGHTS NO
[7]  
BRONTE E, 2003, WUTHERING HEIGHTS, V130, P138
[8]  
BRONTE E, 2002, WUTHERING HEIGHTS, P125
[9]  
COBBE, 1878, CONTEMP REV, V32, P55
[10]  
DOGGETT ME, 1678, HIST PLEAS CROWN