Trespassing Boundaries in Wuthering Heights

The Spatial Turn as a transdisciplinary phenomenon in the Humanities was established in the 1990s, and, especially in the last few decades, geography seems to have pervaded critical analysis and language. According to contemporary geographical and environmental perspectives, the setting in narrat...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Brazzelli, Nicoletta
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Edizioni Ca’ Foscari 2021-09-01
Series:Annali di Ca’ Foscari. Serie Occidentale
Subjects:
Online Access:https://edizionicafoscari.unive.it4/riviste/annali-di-ca-foscari-serie-occidentale/2021/55/trespassing-boundaries-in-wuthering-heights/
id doaj-72e7e664e3364027ac2baf1ced785917
record_format Article
spelling doaj-72e7e664e3364027ac2baf1ced7859172021-08-24T16:48:54ZdeuEdizioni Ca’ FoscariAnnali di Ca’ Foscari. Serie Occidentale2499-15622021-09-01555510.30687/AnnOc/2499-1562/2021/09/005journal_article_5834Trespassing Boundaries in Wuthering HeightsBrazzelli, Nicoletta0Università degli Studi di Milano, Italia The Spatial Turn as a transdisciplinary phenomenon in the Humanities was established in the 1990s, and, especially in the last few decades, geography seems to have pervaded critical analysis and language. According to contemporary geographical and environmental perspectives, the setting in narratives is not only a background defining the place where the plot is located but a complex system that is central to the construction of literary texts. Wuthering Heights (1847) provides an excellent case study. Emily Brontë’s novel is certainly characterized by its topography. Although different sources had been collected by the writer from a wide range of models across the country in Yorkshire, they were then reassembled to form a landscape that is both familiar and uncanny, self-consistent and reminiscent of real buildings and sceneries. Besides, the dynamics between displacement, departures and arrivals and the seeming immobility of the landscape is a crucial pattern of the novel. In Wuthering Heights, the natural world of the moors and its geographies are reminders of history and memory. Brontë’s weaving together of emotional stories into the moorlands suggests a mutual exchange between nature and culture. The writer constructs a textured geography representing the cycles of change, family history, and passion that have created that space. https://edizionicafoscari.unive.it4/riviste/annali-di-ca-foscari-serie-occidentale/2021/55/trespassing-boundaries-in-wuthering-heights/Boundaries. Emily Brontë. Literary geography. Nature. Wuthering Heights.
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brazzelli, Nicoletta
spellingShingle Brazzelli, Nicoletta
Trespassing Boundaries in Wuthering Heights
Annali di Ca’ Foscari. Serie Occidentale
Boundaries. Emily Brontë. Literary geography. Nature. Wuthering Heights.
author_facet Brazzelli, Nicoletta
author_sort Brazzelli, Nicoletta
title Trespassing Boundaries in Wuthering Heights
title_short Trespassing Boundaries in Wuthering Heights
title_full Trespassing Boundaries in Wuthering Heights
title_fullStr Trespassing Boundaries in Wuthering Heights
title_full_unstemmed Trespassing Boundaries in Wuthering Heights
title_sort trespassing boundaries in wuthering heights
publisher Edizioni Ca’ Foscari
series Annali di Ca’ Foscari. Serie Occidentale
issn 2499-1562
publishDate 2021-09-01
description The Spatial Turn as a transdisciplinary phenomenon in the Humanities was established in the 1990s, and, especially in the last few decades, geography seems to have pervaded critical analysis and language. According to contemporary geographical and environmental perspectives, the setting in narratives is not only a background defining the place where the plot is located but a complex system that is central to the construction of literary texts. Wuthering Heights (1847) provides an excellent case study. Emily Brontë’s novel is certainly characterized by its topography. Although different sources had been collected by the writer from a wide range of models across the country in Yorkshire, they were then reassembled to form a landscape that is both familiar and uncanny, self-consistent and reminiscent of real buildings and sceneries. Besides, the dynamics between displacement, departures and arrivals and the seeming immobility of the landscape is a crucial pattern of the novel. In Wuthering Heights, the natural world of the moors and its geographies are reminders of history and memory. Brontë’s weaving together of emotional stories into the moorlands suggests a mutual exchange between nature and culture. The writer constructs a textured geography representing the cycles of change, family history, and passion that have created that space.
topic Boundaries. Emily Brontë. Literary geography. Nature. Wuthering Heights.
url https://edizionicafoscari.unive.it4/riviste/annali-di-ca-foscari-serie-occidentale/2021/55/trespassing-boundaries-in-wuthering-heights/
work_keys_str_mv AT brazzellinicoletta trespassingboundariesinwutheringheights
_version_ 1721197185765212160