Regarding Cathrine (I) from Wuthering Heights:
I was actually speechless, how many people perceived her so negatively. Like, I am sorry, but a marriage for convenience and not out of love is not a great sin, considering her circumstances.
Furthermore, people were convinced, that she was an attention-seeking woman, who was jealous of every light that did not fall on her head...
From my perspective however, it appears, as if those two men decided to shower her with attention on their own accord. Heathcliff doesn´t seem to forgive Cathrine, that he has these feelings for her.
Her understanding of love ect might be a lil bit strange. She thinks, she had to suppress and change herself in order for Edgar to like her, therefore he should be more accepting of her wishes as well. In Cathrine´s eyes she needs Heathcliff like the air, that she breathes.
Additionally, I perceive her as a rather loyal and straightforward person, in contrast, what other people might think. She might not be always kind, though.
Of course, she can be violent and loses her temper pretty easily, but I do think, that if she was a guy, nobody would bat an eye regarding this.
Nellie Dean´s greatest criticism regarding Catherine is her being egoistic (true) and not being a lil submissive wife (also true). She has her will and her wishes and she is not exactly the shy kind of person.
I don’t judge Catherine for marrying for convenience or generally in her relationship with men.
Her relationship with Edgar is fascinating though, because she herself thinks that the one who accommodates her spouse is herself:
People are rightfully fascinated by Catherine not seeing a contradiction or conflict between her “two loves” here, but I also am fascinated that her perception of her own marriage is so radically different from Nelly’s. I think this might actually point to Nelly’s bias.
I do think that Catherine is a rather self-centered individual who can be physically abusive to her servants, so I understand why Nelly in particular dislikes her, though Nelly herself is far from flawless too in this relationship.
I think Catherine’s worst action in the book is the way she revealed Isabella’s crush to Heathcliff, that was a very thoughtless thing to do and had disastrous consequences. But Catherine being thoughtless, petty and spiteful is what makes her human anyway. She definitely didn’t want Isabella to be actually harmed.
So. my verdict is that Catherine is a complicated, troubled and morally complex individual. But this is actually a massive achievement of Bronte. She managed to write a morally flawed 19-year-old girl in a domestic setting without making her sexually transgressive, especially violent, or vapid and flighty: You would expect a female character who is in love with a man other than her husband, who is shown to be physically abusive to others, and who rejects marrying the one she loves because he is poor to come across as these things, but Catherine Earnshaw doesn’t come across as any cliche. She is wonderfully human.
It is also a great achievement that I can be annoyed at Catherine’s actions while reading the book but also totally understand her unique charisma and why men are in love with her. No one, not even people who hate the character, questioned why Heathcliff and Edgar are obsessed with her.
But in my current reading of the book, the thing that I am most obsessed with regarding Catherine is her relationship to social class. It is absolutely contradictory and fascinating. She comes across as both a snob and the exact opposite of one. I want to study it all in a jar under a microscope.