'If some readers have been seduced by him, it is because everyone likes a rogue.' (Wuthering Heights, 2009)

Not many films are panned even before theyāve gone into production. Such has been the fate, though, of yet another version of Wuthering Heights. Already derided as melodramatic trash, some reviewers are wondering whether the director, Emerald Fennell, has actually read the book.
Whether she has or hasn’t, you canāt pluck the tormented love story of Heathcliff and Catherine out of its complex context without inflicting some serious damage on Emily BrontĆ«ās fiction. The novel is about a lot more than love. In its intensely materialist way, it also concerns the conflict between nature and culture, labour and gentility, power and rebellion, struggles over property and inheritance, the relations between the English landowning class and the small farmers or yeomanry, and a good deal more besides.Ā
How do you put these issues on screen? You canāt. You can tell a story entitled āCathy and Heathcliffā, but it isnāt what Emily BrontĆ« wrote. Our own civilization is obsessed by sex but bored by yeomen and landowners. The background to the BrontĆ«s is the world of poverty, political repression and smouldering social rebellion known as the Hungry Forties. The sisters would have seen a good deal of destitution on their own doorstep, and were alive to the turbulent times in which they lived. They were shrewd, hard-headed, lower-middle-class Yorkshire women, not three weird sisters lost in erotic fantasy in the moorland mists.
Nor is Wuthering Heights what you might call a romance. In fact, you might even call it an anti-romance. The relationship between the two lovers, if you can call it that, is implacably impersonal. Thereās a relentless, elemental, even brutal quality to it, which lies much deeper than mere feeling. We are no longer in the mannered world of Jane Austen. Heathcliff is no Hugh Grant but a pitiless exploiter. Beneath his flinty exterior beats a heart of stone. If some readers have been seduced by him, it is because everyone likes a rogue. In his dealings with Catherine, what Freud calls eros and thanatos, sexuality and the drive for extinction, are impossible to disentangle. Like Jane Eyre, the best-known work of Emilyās sister, Charlotte, the novel is shot through with sado-masochism. If this is love, then thereās nothing in the least pleasant or affable about it. One canāt even speak of it as sexual. Itās more like a fight to the death ā an absolute, remorseless, inhuman need for each other with a fierce undertow of violence, one which has little to do with tenderness or affection and perhaps refuses to be placated even in the grave. Almost uniquely, we have a Victorian novel which doesnāt end on a genially upbeat note with that magical solution to all human heartache: marriage.
This is an important milestone in the evolution of the English novel. With the exception of Samuel Richardsonās great 18th-century work Clarissa, which few have read because itās a million words long, hardly any English novel before Wuthering Heights ends on a tragic note. Even Wuthering Heights is ambiguous in this respect: do Catherine and Heathcliff find fulfilment beyond the grave or not? Then, from the fiction of Thomas Hardy to our own time, the norm becomes a tragic (or at least non-comic) ending. There are a number of reasons for this seismic literary shift, among which is the fact that the Victorians (who lived in perpetual fear of revolution) saw a link between gloom and political disaffection. Part of the purpose of art was to edify its audience, and edified audiences were less likely to tear up the paving stones to build barricades. Charlotte BrontĆ« conforms to this demand in Jane Eyre, blinding and disfiguring Rochester in order to punish his bigamy and bring him, chastened and repentant, to a marriage in which Jane is definitely the boss. Emily bravely refuses this conventional strategy.
Wuthering Heights may tacitly suggest a reason for the strangely asexual nature of the bond between its protagonists. Heathcliff is brought home one night by Cathyās father and dumped unceremoniously on the family, but he might be āfamilyā even so. He may be old Earnshawās bastard child, in which case he and Catherine are half-siblings, and their non-sexual relation springs from an unconscious incest taboo. Itās hard otherwise to see why this gruff yeoman farmer, who doesnāt seem given to spontaneous acts of charity, should give house-room to such an unprepossessing little brat. We shall, alas, never know. Anyway, the intense unity of selves which Catherine and Heathcliff feel, which is hard to speak of as a relationship since relationship implies otherness, works even without this incestuous subtext.
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