1. Bifurcated Tellers in Wuthering Heights
All may have been available to the author of Wuthering Heights (1847), whose own richly experimental novel works with intricate permutations of multiple narrative, unreliable narration, and two-volume structure. ... The reader of Wuthering Heights may at first suppose that Lockwood is to be the narrator of this novel: for three chapters, indeed, he performs this role, and this device has much to do with the novel's ultimate significance. ... His first task is to take us from Thrushcross Grange, where he is tenant, to Wuthering Heights where his landlord lives. ... working farmhouse is ...
- Word Count: 2971
- Approx Pages: 12
- Grade Level: Undergraduate