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Religion and Fantasy in Selected Novels of Ramon J. SenderSmith, Abe Benavides 05 1900 (has links)
This study is an assessment of the topics of religion and fantasy in several novels of Ram6n Sender which various critics have characterized as being particularly concerned with one or both of the topics. Both published and unpublished works of criticism and history have been, consulted. The "Introduction" provides biographical and critical information. Chapter II documents in the characterization and the observations and actions of characters significant reflections of the author's attitude toward religion. In Chapter III the primary emphasis is upon the illogical, the absurd, and the grotesque, The "Conclusion" states that in the opinion of critics, in the significance of characterization, and by his own admission, Sender is liberal, anticlerical, humanistic, and occasionally attracted to the fantastic.
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Märchenkinder - Zeitgenossen : Untersuchungen zur Kinderliteratur der Weimarer Republik /Karrenbrock, Helga, January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Universität Osnabrück, 1993.
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Die Innenweltdarstellung in der realistischen Kinderliteratur des 20. Jahrhunderts : Formen- und Funktionswandel - eine erzähltheoretische Untersuchung zur Bestimmung und Präzisierung gattungstypischer Phänomene /Bendel, Christian. January 2008 (has links)
Dissertation--Universität Bochum, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 337-349).
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Werewolves, wings, and other weird transformations fantastic metamorphosis in children's and young adult fantasy literature /Chappell, Shelley Bess. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Humanities, Department of English, 2007. / Bibliography: p. 239-289.
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De-demonising universality : transcultural dragons and the universal agent in J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter and David Eddings' The BelgariadSteenkamp, Janka 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA (English))--University of Stellenbosch, 2009. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This dissertation provides a reading of the fantasy novel series Harry Potter by J.K. Rowling
and The Belgariad by David Eddings. In particular this dissertation endeavours to recuperate
a literary critical methodology rooted in Myth Criticism. Further, it seeks to demonstrate the
continued relevance and necessity of this form of criticism in our postmodern era and to
refute some of the commonplaces of postmodern critical theory, specifically the
poststructuralist scepticism towards the idea of universal truth and individual agency. Using
Jungian theory, myth critics ranging from Laurence Coupe to Joseph Campbell and
incorporating various postmodern theorists, like the contemporary Marxist theorist Terry
Eagleton, and fantasy critics like Brian Attebery and Ursula LeGuin, this dissertation aims to
give a well-rounded analysis of the merits of looking at fantasy as a legitimate field of literary
study. Moreover, this dissertation seeks to illustrate the fact that fantasy is capable of
informing readers’ interaction with the ‘real’ world and that this genre allows for insight into
identity formation in present day reality. The chief structure used to explore these claims is an
analysis of the Hero’s Journey. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: This dissertation provides a reading of the fantasy novel series Harry Potter by J.K. Rowling
and The Belgariad by David Eddings. In particular this dissertation endeavours to recuperate
a literary critical methodology rooted in Myth Criticism. Further, it seeks to demonstrate the
continued relevance and necessity of this form of criticism in our postmodern era and to
refute some of the commonplaces of postmodern critical theory, specifically the
poststructuralist scepticism towards the idea of universal truth and individual agency. Using
Jungian theory, myth critics ranging from Laurence Coupe to Joseph Campbell and
incorporating various postmodern theorists, like the contemporary Marxist theorist Terry
Eagleton, and fantasy critics like Brian Attebery and Ursula LeGuin, this dissertation aims to
give a well-rounded analysis of the merits of looking at fantasy as a legitimate field of literary
study. Moreover, this dissertation seeks to illustrate the fact that fantasy is capable of
informing readers’ interaction with the ‘real’ world and that this genre allows for insight into
identity formation in present day reality. The chief structure used to explore these claims is an
analysis of the Hero’s Journey.
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Die fantastiese as literêre soort, met spesifieke verwysing na die oeuvre's van Etienne Leroux en Willem BrakmanDe Vries, Mimie Naudene 13 October 2015 (has links)
M.A. (Afrikaans en Nederlands) / Please refer to full text to view abstract
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Pojetí hrdiny ve fantasy literatuře / The conception of hero in fantasy literatureZbiejczuková, Irena January 2011 (has links)
ZBIEJCZUKOVÁ, I. The conception of hero in fantasy literature. Diploma thesis. Prague: ÚČLLV FF UK, 2010-2011. This diploma thesis deals with typology of heroes and heroins in fantasy literature, with special regard to heroic quest from the point of view of literally composition. One part of the thesis applies to the defition and history of fantasy genre in both anglo-saxon and czech environment. The thesis therefore uses and cites both czech and foreign fantasy literally works. The aim of the thesis is to point to archetypical neomythic structure of fantasy texts and to their tendency to recreate heroism using particular examples of fantasy literature.
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Ponder and believe interpretive experiments in Victorian literary fantasies /Davis, Allison Cooper. January 1900 (has links)
Dissertation (Ph.D.)--The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, 2009. / Directed by Mary Ellis Gibson; submitted to the Dept. of English. Title from PDF t.p. (viewed May 5, 2010). Includes bibliographical references (p. 194-207).
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Fantasy as a mode in British and Irish literary decadence, 1885–1925Mercurio, Jeremiah Romano January 2011 (has links)
This Ph. D. thesis investigates the use of fantasy by British and Irish 'Decadent' authors and illustrators, including Oscar Wilde, Max Beerbohm, Aubrey Beardsley, 'Vernon Lee' (Violet Paget), Ernest Dowson, and Charles Ricketts. Furthermore, this study demonstrates why fantasy was an apposite form for literary Decadence, which is defined in this thesis as a supra-generic mode characterized by its anti-mimetic impulse, its view of language as autonomous and artificial, its frequent use of parody and pastiche, and its transgression of boundaries between art forms. Literary Decadence in the United Kingdom derives its view of autonomous language from Anglo-German Romantic philology and literature, consequently being distinguished from French Decadence by its resistance to realism and Naturalism, which assume language's power to signify the 'real world'. Understanding language to be inorganic, Decadent writers blithely countermand notions of linguistic fitness and employ devices such as catachresis, paradox, and tautology, which in turn emphasize the self-referentiality of Decadent texts. Fantasy furthers the Decadent argument about language because works of fantasy bear no specific relationship to 'reality'; they can express anything evocable within language, as J.R.R. Tolkien demonstrates with his example of "the green sun" (a phrase that can exist independent of the sun's actually being green). The thesis argues that fantasy's usefulness in underscoring arguments about linguistic autonomy explains its widespread presence in Decadent prose and visual art, especially in genres that had become associated with realism and Naturalism, such as the novel (Chapter 1), the short story (Chapter 3), drama (Chapter 4), and textual illustration (Chapter 2). The thesis also analyzes Decadents' use of a wholly non-realistic genre, the fairy tale (see Chapter 5), in order to delineate the consequences of their use of fantasy for the construction of character and gender within their texts.
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Werewolves, wings, and other weird transformations: fantastic metamorphosis in children's and young adult fantasy literature / Fantastic metamorphosis in children's and young adult fantasy literatureChappell, Shelley Bess January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Humanities, Department of English, 2007. / Bibliography: p. 239-289. / Introduction -- Fantastic metamorphosis as childhood 'otherness' -- The metamorphic growth of wings : deviant development and adolescent hybridity -- Tenors of maturation: developing powers and changing identities -- Changing representations of werewolves: ideologies of racial and ethnic otherness -- The desire for transcendence: jouissance in selkie narratives -- Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Appendix: "The great Silkie of Sule Skerry": three versions. / My central thesis is that fantastic motifs work on a metaphorical level to encapsulate and express ideologies that have frequently been naturalised as 'truths'. I develop a theory of motif metaphors in order to examine the ideologies generated by the fantastic motif of metamorphosis in a range of contemporary children's and young adult fantasy texts. Although fantastic metamorphosis is an exceptionally prevalent and powerful motif in children's and young adult fantasy literature, symbolising important ideas about change and otherness in relation to childhood, adolescence, and maturation, and conveying important ideologies about the world in which we live, it has been little analysed in children's literature criticism. The detailed analyses of particular metamorphosis motif metaphors in this study expand and refine our academic understanding of the metamorphosis figure and consequently provide insight into the underlying principles and particular forms of a variety of significant ideologies. / By examining several principal metamorphosis motif metaphors I investigate how a number of specific cultural beliefs are constructed and represented in contemporary children's and young adult fantasy literature. I particularly focus upon metamorphosis as a metaphor for childhood otherness; adolescent hybridity and deviant development; maturation as a process of self-change and physical empowerment; racial and ethnic difference and otherness; and desire and jouissance. I apply a range of pertinent cultural theories to explore these motif metaphors fully, drawing on the interpretive frameworks most appropriate to the concepts under consideration. I thus employ general psychoanalytic theories of embodiment, development, language, subjectivity, projection, and abjection; poststructuralist, social constructionist, and sociological theories; and wide-ranging literary theories, philosophical theories, gender and feminist theories, race and ethnicity theories, developmental theories, and theories of fantasy and animality. The use of such theories allows for incisive explorations of the explicit and implicit ideologies metaphorically conveyed by the motif of metamorphosis in different fantasy texts. / In this study, I present a number of specific analyses that enhance our knowledge of the motif of fantastic metamorphosis and of significant cultural ideologies. In doing so, I provide a model for a new and precise approach to the analysis of fantasy literature. / Mode of access: World Wide Web. / [12], 294 p
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