Search
Now showing items 1-8 of 8
Communities or Collections matching your query
Items matching your query
Bachelorarbeit
Crisis or failure of hegemonic masculinities in David Lodge’s Campus Trilogy
(2013-06-20)
This bachelor’s thesis examines the crisis of hegemonic masculinities in David Lodge’s Campus Trilogy. In the course of the thesis, I demonstrate that the male characters in the novels aspire to hegemonic ideals of masculinity, but that ultimately most of them fail in their aspirations. However, I also show that this does not lead to the abandonment of this pursuit, but merely to its reformulation and a continued attempt of male characters to aspire to this reformulated ideal. In order to achieve this, I conduct a ...
Aufsatz
The English novel in the time of Shakespeare
(Universität Kassel, FB 08, Anglistik, Romanistik, 2005-07-25)
The rise of the English novel needs rethinking after it has been confined to the "formal realism" of Defoe, Richardson, and Fielding (Watt, 1957), to "antecedents, forerunners" (Schlauch, 1968; Klein, 1970) or to mere "prose fiction" (McKillop, 1951; Davis, Richetti, 1969; Fish, 1971; Salzman, 1985; Kroll, 1998). My paper updates a book by Jusserand under the same title (1890) by proving that the social and moral history of the long prose genre admits no strict separation of "novel" and "romance", as both concepts ...
Aufsatz
Literatur und Intertextualität
(Universität Kassel, FB 08, Anglistik, Romanistik, 2005-07-22)
Als Intertextualität bezeichnet men die Interferenz und Interdependenz literarischer Texte und das daraus entstehende kommunikative Potential. Der ursprünglich von Kristeva stammende Begriff geht auf die Erkentnis zurück, dass Texte nicht in einem Vakuum entstehen und existieren, sondern immer sie beeinflussende Vorläufer haben, wie sie auch selbst spätere Texte beeinflussen. Dabei ist das Erkennen und Entwickeln von Intertextualitäten nicht allein auf den Verfasser beschränkt, sondern gehört auch zu den konstruktivistischen ...
Aufsatz
Eros and Thanatos in Ernest Hemingway's "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber" and Angela Carter's "Master"
(Universität Kassel, FB 08, Anglistik, Romanistik, 2001)
According to Hemingway all good prose has the dignity and draught of an iceberg. This is especially true of Hemingway's short stories.
"Francis Macomber" counts among the best composed short stories in English. Interpretation sways between Hemingway's idealisation of the male code and its deconstruction. Is the White Hunter a British scourge of American values or is Margot the tragic victim of a newly founded male friendship? Is the open ending rather a hunting accident or the mean murder of an unloved spouse? ...