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The Literary Deep Dive begins its four-part journey through Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights , one novel, one life, and one of the most psychologically violent stories ever written in English.
In this opening episode, host Richard Backus explores the woman behind the book: Emily Brontë, who spent nearly her entire life on the edge of the Yorkshire moors, published one novel under a pseudonym, and died at thirty before she could see it understood. We trace the Brontë household, Patrick's Irish origins, the early death of their mother, the extraordinary creative world Emily and her siblings built from childhood — and follow Emily from Haworth to Brussels and back, asking what made her inner life so opaque even to those who loved her most.
From there, we turn to context: the rigid class hierarchies of Georgian England that make Heathcliff's story possible, the 1840s social tensions Emily was writing within, and the Gothic literary tradition she inherited and quietly dismantled. And we lay out the five major themes that will run through all four episodes: love as identity rather than sentiment, class and the violence of exclusion, the moors as an interior landscape, revenge and what it ultimately costs, and the novel's deliberate refusal to confirm or deny the supernatural.
This is where Wuthering Heights begins. Not with Heathcliff on the moors, but with a woman at a table in a cold parsonage, writing a story that would outlast her by nearly two centuries.
The Literary Deep Dive is produced by University Teaching Edition.
By Richard G BackusThe Literary Deep Dive begins its four-part journey through Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights , one novel, one life, and one of the most psychologically violent stories ever written in English.
In this opening episode, host Richard Backus explores the woman behind the book: Emily Brontë, who spent nearly her entire life on the edge of the Yorkshire moors, published one novel under a pseudonym, and died at thirty before she could see it understood. We trace the Brontë household, Patrick's Irish origins, the early death of their mother, the extraordinary creative world Emily and her siblings built from childhood — and follow Emily from Haworth to Brussels and back, asking what made her inner life so opaque even to those who loved her most.
From there, we turn to context: the rigid class hierarchies of Georgian England that make Heathcliff's story possible, the 1840s social tensions Emily was writing within, and the Gothic literary tradition she inherited and quietly dismantled. And we lay out the five major themes that will run through all four episodes: love as identity rather than sentiment, class and the violence of exclusion, the moors as an interior landscape, revenge and what it ultimately costs, and the novel's deliberate refusal to confirm or deny the supernatural.
This is where Wuthering Heights begins. Not with Heathcliff on the moors, but with a woman at a table in a cold parsonage, writing a story that would outlast her by nearly two centuries.
The Literary Deep Dive is produced by University Teaching Edition.