IB Prized Writing Sevenoaks School IB Prized Writing 2014 | Page 8

Tabitha Adams - English Contents Introduction 8 Main Body 9 Conclusion 16 Bibliography 17 Abstract This essay explores the research question; “In what ways and to what effect do Emily Brontë and Homer portray their protagonists, Heathcliff and Odysseus, in Wuthering Heights and The Odyssey?”. The essay focuses on the unconventional nature of the protagonists Heathcliff and Odysseus, touching on the nature of Achilles in The Iliad as a comparatively conventional Homeric hero to Odysseus. Odysseus is portrayed by Homer as guileful, cunning and able to exert great self- restraint, which separates him from other Greek heroes. Heathcliff is portrayed by Brontë as a morally abstruse and unrepentant character who nonetheless gains sympathy from the reader and defies both Victorian and Romantic literary conventions. Both protagonists are depicted as outsiders and their status as an outsider is one of the main influential factors behind their unconventional characters. Odysseus and Heathcliff are used by Homer and Brontë as literary devices to challenge the conventional social and moral values of their respective societies. They are also used as a challenge to literary convention in order to influence change and development of the concept of the hero. One point I am aware of, but was not able to cover in this essay, is that Homer wrote The Odyssey in verse and it might be interesting to look at whether the comparative genres of verse and novel reveal something else; Homer was using conventional heroic verse despite Odysseus not being a conventional hero, whereas Brontë uses the innovative technique of multiple narrators and moves back and forth in time which was unconventional for a Victorian novel. 7