Programme Code : MEG
Course Code : Meg
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Year : 2012 Views: 969 Submitted By : Rishi On 06th February, 2012

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Q.


1. Trace the development of the novel as a literary form in England.



2. Discuss Fielding's narrative style in 'Tom Jones'.



3. How do economic concerns touch the lives of the characters in 'Pride and

Prejudice' ?



4. What is the role of marriage in 'Wuthering Heights'?



5. Discuss the title of the novel 'Great Expectations'.



6. What part do birth, rank and class play in the development of the story in

'Middlemarch'?



7. Would you agree that 'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man' is a novel of

formation? Illustrate your answer.



8. Discuss the structure of "Heart of Darkness' and say how it affects meaning.



9. Would it be right to say that Forster's treatment of the Indian landscape suggests a

passage away from India rather than to it in 'A Passage to India'? Give reasons for

your answer.



10. How does Miss Brodie's faith influence her decisions in 'The Prime of Miss

Brodie'?


Catch The Solution

By Hina Gupta


Question 4 (Answer):



Most of the characters in Wuthering Heights are members of the gentry (upper middle class), one step lower than the aristocratic class. On the heath, the Lintons are more well off than the Earnshaws. And the Earnshaws are more well off than the orphaned Heathcliff. So, Catherine Earnshaw marries Edgar Linton to become "the greatest woman in the neighborhood." She moves over from Wuthering Heights to Thrushcross Grange for socio-economic advancement. Even though she loves Heathcliff (the romantic concept of marriage), she marries for a better house and more land.



Heathcliff resents the concept of marriage to no end. Even though he turns himself into a member of the landed gentry, he is still forsaken by Catherine and the society. So, he plans revenge on the entire system: he abuses the concept of marriage to acquire both houses (Wuthering Heights and Thrushcross Grange). He arranges marriage between the younger Catherine and Linton as a cruel punishment to this second generation on the heath. His goal, I think, is to destroy the (romantic or economic) institution of marriage by abusing it to its extreme end.




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