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dc.contributor.authorBernabéu Lorenzo, Marta 
dc.date.accessioned2026-02-25T08:24:32Z
dc.date.available2026-02-25T08:24:32Z
dc.date.issued2020-05-07
dc.identifier.citationBernabeu, Marta. Transgressing the Boundaries of the Outsider in Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights (1847) and Michael Stewart's Ill Will: The Untold Story of Heathcliff (2018). Oxford Research in English (2020): 99-118.es_ES
dc.identifier.issn2397-2947
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10366/170040
dc.description.abstractThis article examines how the figure of the outsider, embodied by Heathcliff, transgresses social, affective, and spatial boundaries in Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights (1847) and Michael Stewart’s neo-Victorian adaptation Ill Will: The Untold Story of Heathcliff (2018). Drawing on affect theory and spatial theory, the study argues that Heathcliff’s pain functions as a source of affective agency, enabling him to resist marginalisation and assert his identity. In Wuthering Heights, Heathcliff’s suffering—caused by racial, social, and emotional exclusion—leads him to embrace an outsider identity and disrupt the social order through acts of hostility and revenge. His orientation toward pain becomes both a form of self-definition and a means of challenging the artificial boundaries imposed on him. In contrast, Ill Will reinterprets Heathcliff’s experience by granting him narrative voice and exploring his journey to uncover his origins, emphasising his sense of displacement, unhomeness, and identity struggle. Although he initially seeks to escape his pain, he ultimately recognises it as central to his identity and agency. The article concludes that both texts portray the outsider’s transgression of boundaries as driven by affective experience, particularly pain, which destabilises social divisions and exposes the oppressive structures that produce exclusion. Through this comparative analysis, the essay highlights how neo-Victorian fiction revisits and expands the emotional and social complexities of canonical literary outsiders.es_ES
dc.language.isoenges_ES
dc.subjectNeo-Victorian Fictiones_ES
dc.subjectWuthering Heightses_ES
dc.subjectHeathcliffes_ES
dc.subjectIll Will: The Untold Story of Heathcliffes_ES
dc.subjectMichael Stewartes_ES
dc.titleTransgressing the Boundaries of the Outsider in Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights (1847) and Michael Stewart's Ill Will: The Untold Story of Heathcliff (2018)es_ES
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/articlees_ES
dc.relation.publishversionhttps://oxfordresearchenglish.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/ore-10-boundaries-and-transgressions.pdf
dc.subject.unesco6202.02 Análisis Literarioes_ES
dc.rights.accessRightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/embargoedAccesses_ES
dc.audience.educationLevel
dc.journal.titleOxford Research in English
dc.journal.titleORE
dc.issue.number10
dc.page.initial99
dc.page.final175
dc.publication.year2020


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