OAK

『워더링 하이츠』 속 캐서린의 유령에 대하여: 가부장적 정체성의 재정의를 통한 재소유 과정

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Abstract
This article analyzes Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights (1847) by using the theoretical paradigm in Beth Torgerson’s book, Reading the Brontë Body (2005). Torgerson interprets Wuthering Heights as a critique of the patriarchal system by using the metaphor of “illness,” to focus on the flaws of male-centered inheritance and economic structures. According to Torgerson, for Brontë, patriarchal society is where both women and socially marginalized men are deprived of their economic and bodily autonomy because of their lack of access to inherited land, property, wealth, family name, and social status. Torgerson defines this hierarchy as a relationship of “dis/possession” within the patriarchal system. Torgerson argues that the recurring images of the “vampire” and “ghost” in Wuthering Heights symbolize the patriarch and the victims of patriarchy, metaphorically representing the dynamics of “dis/possession.” Thus, “vampire” and “ghost,” along with the metaphor of “illness,” expose the fundamental corruption of the patriarchal system. This study readdresses Torgerson’s interpretation of the dynamics of dispossession in an attempt to examine why Catherine Linton’s ghost cannot enter Wuthering Heights after having died and haunted the grounds for twenty years. Catherine’s ghost suffers from the “illness” of “dispossession
Author(s)
정이화이정연
Issued Date
2025-05-31
Type
Article
Keyword
인문학
DOI
10.21559/aellk.2025.51.2.004
URI
http://repository.sungshin.ac.kr/handle/2025.oak/8772
Publisher
대한영어영문학회
ISSN
1226-8682
Appears in Collections:
영어영문학과 > 학술논문
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