IB Prized Writing Sevenoaks School IB Prized Writing 2014 | Page 9

Tabitha Adams - English Introduction The Odyssey is the second known work of Western Literature, almost unanimously agreed to have been composed by the ancient Greek poet Homer, towards the end of the eighth century BC. Emily Brontë lived in West Yorkshire, England and published Wuthering Heights in 1847. I was interested in the idea of identity concerning the protagonists of these texts, Heathcliff and Odysseus, and I realized that each had a rather unique identity within their scope of contemporaries. Both Homer and Brontë seemed fascinated with the portrayal of an unconventional hero and although The Odyssey and Wuthering Heights appear two incongruous works, written thousands of years apart, I believe the authors of each text achieve a similar effect from the creation of their protagonists. In my essay I will discuss 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 Odyssesy?” It took Brontë a year to publish Wuthering Heights and the novel was not initially well received. Victorian critics found it too morbid and violent, and Heathcliff as a character was regarded as demonic, even by Emily’s sister Charlotte. Wuthering Heights has subsequently become one of the most influential and keenly studied works of English literature. Homer’s Odyssey depicts the hero Odysseus as unlike any hero from The Iliad or the rest of the ancient heroic tradition. Homer’s Odyssesy influenced many Greek writers and philosophers from Sophocles to Plato and the epic poem is seen as one of the forefathers of all Western literature. These two very different texts, both groundbreaking within the context of their time and subsequently very influential, present us with two unorthodox heroes. In my essay I endeavour to explain in what ways the heroes Heathcliff and Odysseus are unconventional and how an unconventional protagonist allows an author to challenge the conventions of literature and society. 4 8