Heroines in literary naturalism are different from the popular concepts of ideal heroines because the former lack certain qualities we expect from the latter who are powerful. Naturalistic heroines are the conquered ones because they are construed as victims of their environment. Identified with someone low and ignoble bereft of the will to alter her fate, the naturalistic heroine suggests that she has issues about herself as a product of heredity and social conditions. Because she has been moulded by her environment and heredity, she acquires certain traits that have direct bearing to her instincts and physical desires and which Zola in his doctrines of naturalism refers to as the “beast within” depicting an animal inheritance. Since the n...