References
- Richard Chase, 'The Brontës: A Centennial Observance', in The Brontës: AA Collection of Critical Essays, ed. by Ian Gregor (Englewood Cliffs: Prentice Hall, 1970; repr. 1986), pp. 19–33 (p. 32).
- Wuthering Heights, book II, chapter II, p. 166. Page numbers refer to the Penguin edition of 2000 edited by Pauline Nestor.
- Wuthering Heights, I, III, 25.
- Dorothy Van Ghent, The English Novel: Form and Function (New York 1958), p. 158.
- Wuthering Heights, I, III, 25.
- Wuthering Heights, I, V, 42.
- Wuthering Heights, I, IX, 80.
- Wuthering Heights, I, IX, 80.
- Wuthering Heights, I, IX, 80.
- Wuthering Heights, I, XII, 121–22.
- Wuthering Heights, 1, XII, 120
- Pauline Nestor, 'Introduction' to Wuthering Heights, p. xvii
- Wuthering Heights, I, pc, 78.
- Wuthering Heights, I, IX, 80.
- Lacan defines the idealization of self thus: 'C'est cette image qui se fixe, moi idéal, du point oùle sujet s'arrete comme idéal du moi. Le moi est des lors fonction de maitrise, jeu de prestance, rivalité constituée', Jacques Lacan, Ecrits I-II (Paris : Seuil, 1966; 1971; 1999), II, p. 289
- Nestor, p. XVII.
- Lacan, i, p. 95.
- Wuthering Heights, I, XII, 120.
- Wuthering Heights, I, XII, 122.
- Wuthering Heights, I, IX, 80–82.
- Wuthering Heights, I, XIV,152.
- Wuthering Heights, II, XVII, 2.96.
- Wuthering Heights, II, IV, 187.
- Wuthering Heights, II, IV, 192.
- Wuthering Heights, I, IV, 187—VII, 2.19.
- Chase, p. 32.
- Wuthering Heights, II, XIII, 263–64.
- Wuthering Heights, II, IV, 193.
- Wuthering Heights, II, IV, 196.
- Wuthering Heights, II, X, 246.
- Wuthering Heights, II,XVI, 289.
- `L'agressivite est la tendance corrélative d'un mode d'identification que nous appelons narcissique et qui détermine la structure formelle du moi de l'homme et du registre d'entités caractéristique de son monde', Lacan, I, p. 109.
- " Robert C. MacKibben, 'The Image of the Book in Wuthering Heights', in The Brontës: A Collection of Critical Essays, ed. by Ian Gregor (Englewood Cliffs: Prentice Hall, 1970; rept. 1986) pp. 34–43 (p•
- Wuthering Heights, II, XVIII, 308.
- Chase, p. 32.
- Wuthering Heights, II, XVIII, 313.
- Wuthering Heights, II, XIX, 319.
- `la dialectique qui lie dès lors le je à des situations socialement élaborées', Lacan, I, p. 97.