During the Victorian period, the inequalities between genders were tense because the gap distinction was increasing instead of decreasing. Women were tired of the discrimination and the injustice that society was implementing on their shoulders. The frustration of pretending to be the submissive wife and hiding under male pen names to have their works published was pushing women to the limit. Women such as the Brontë sisters used pen names because they knew the receiving backlash inputs them into the group of outcasts. The Brontë sisters were strong writers that caught the attention of the public, but Emily Bronte who wrote under the name Ellis Bell published emotional poems and her most well-known book, Wuthering Heights, which caused for the critics to talk about her work. Emily Brontë represented the difference and was not afraid to write a piece that challenged the definition of Victorian writing.
It is not debatable that Emily Bronte continues to remain one of the most renowned names across literary circles. Regarded by a majority of scholars of literature as the inventor of modern short story and a master of this literary form of art, Emily Bronte has crafted an influential foundation for short art narrative; emphasizing intentional arrangement of minor details, characterization and structure and theme, to create a collective effect within the mind of the reader. How she manages such kind of a feat is one of the primary reasons for the continued circulation and readership of her book.