Séllei, NóraSulyák, Alexandra Noémi2013-01-182013-01-182012-03-202013-01-18http://hdl.handle.net/2437/156346Emily Brontë’s use of space and spatial metaphors in Wuthering Heights is a predominant and crucial feature of the novel – the foundation onto which the famously turbulent relationships of the characters and their chaotic states of mind are lain, along with an underlying criticism of contemporary Victorian society. Due to its dreary landscape, unpredictable stormy weather and vast moorlands, the Yorkshire region of England bears the connotations of a depressing, sinister world; thus the Yorkshire setting of the novel is a very significant feature as it mirrors the rather bleak, dismal concepts explored by Brontë regarding love, duty and social expectations.24enspatial metaphorsWuthering heightsThe Function and Significance of Spatial Metaphors in Emily Bronte's Wuthering HeightsdiplomamunkaDEENK Témalista::Irodalomtudomány::Klasszika-filológiaip