Listen&Learn: Wuthering Heights
Announcement: All Good Things (Must) Come To An End 😭
Posted by: Jaksyn Peacock
Pre-listening vocabulary
- doomed: expected to end in death or suffering
- depiction: the way a story presents a certain topic
- unconventional: unusual, unexpected
- offensive: causing shock, anger, or pain to someone
- pseudonym: a false name that someone uses to hide their real identity
- credit: acknowledgement that someone is responsible for their work
Listening activity
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 1:31 — 1.4MB)
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Gapfill exercise
Comprehension questions
See answers below
- Wuthering Heights was Emily Brontë’s
a. second novel
b. third novel
c. only novel - Heathcliff and Catherine’s relationship is best described as
a. innocent and silly
b. strong and healthy
c. messy and cruel - Brontë originally published the novel
a. anonymously
b. under the name of her sister, Charlotte Brontë
c. under the pseudonym Ellis Bell
Discussion/essay questions
- Do you think it is important for characters in stories to be likable? Why or why not? When is it useful to have likable characters? When is it not?
Transcript
Wuthering Heights is an 1847 novel by English author Emily Brontë. It was the only novel Brontë ever completed. It tells the doomed love story of the characters Heathcliff and Catherine. The depiction of romance in Wuthering Heights was very unconventional for its time. Heathcliff and Catherine’s relationship is messy and cruel. Throughout the novel, they repeatedly harm each other and the people around them, causing tragic deaths for many characters. The book was shocking to readers at the time, who found the subject matter morally offensive. Even Brontë’s sister, author Charlotte Brontë, thought some of the topics were questionable. Wuthering Heights was originally published under the pseudonym Ellis Bell. Brontë and her sisters all used male pseudonyms so their writing would be taken seriously. She did not receive credit for the novel until after her death in 1848.
Answers to comprehension questions
1c 2c 3c
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11 comments
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Abida says:
Fantastic, I enjoyed listening and learned many points. It’s valuable. I suggest that if you also mention meaning of difficult words.
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Anna Roth says:
Thanks for telling the background of the story. Back then, it was a hard time being a woman. Women were seen with less interlectual knowledge than men. And the author could have in mind that love relationships were not always happy once.
I personally, prefer reading novels with a happy ending. The older I get the more I need happy endings, since live has not always happy times and worries can take happiness hard to achieve. -
Joseph Webb says:
This novel is presented often on TV now in America, but I never knew the historical importance and context of it, as you have explained here. It adds a huge amount to the understanding and appreciation of the reader. Thank you.
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Sandra Fernandes says:
Thank you for taking your time to help us to learn english.
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Sana says:
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Ahmad says:
Hello
Very,very helpful and well organized.thank you för this site.
Merry christmas and Happy new year -
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