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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

An Archetypal Analysis Of E. M. Forster&amp / #8217 / s Fiction

Madran, Cumhur Yilmaz 01 September 2004 (has links) (PDF)
The present analysis is intended to shed some light on Forster&amp / #8217 / s use of myth, recurrent mythical images and archetypal patterns in his works. This study analyses Forster&amp / #8217 / s archetypal images making particular references to his major works namely, short stories, Where Angels Fear to Tread, A Room with a View, The Longest Journey, Howards End and A Passage to India. The study is confined to the functions and significance of the mythical images and archetypal patterns represented in the aforementioned works. Forster tried to reflect the insecurity and rootlessness of modern life through mythical motifs / he showed a modern man who has become alienated from himself and nature. Forster&amp / #8217 / s most obvious use of mythology is found in the short stories, which are fantasies. It is a mythology which stems from earth and nature, the two elements which act as unifying forces throughout his fiction. It is interesting to note further that this preoccupation with earth and nature is carried into all the other novels before A Passage to India. Forster&amp / #8217 / s use of classical myth and his general attitude toward nature and earth are found in all his fiction. The method used is archetypal criticism / it deals with archetypes which are primordial images perceived across cultures, inherited from time immemorial, issuing from a &amp / #8216 / collective unconscious&amp / #8217 / . An archetype is a mythic symbol, which is deeply rooted in the unconscious, more broadly based on a foundation of universal nature than an ordinary literary symbol, and is more generally expressive of the elemental in man and nature. Chapter one identifies the dominant archetypal approaches and further selects the most appropriate framework for a study of myth and archetypes in Forster&amp / #8217 / s work. Chapter two deals with nature archetypes which find their best expression in Forster&amp / #8217 / s short stories. Chapter three and four focus on Forster&amp / #8217 / s character archetypes in his A Room with a View, and Where Angels Fear to Tread. Chapter five attempts to explore the tragic and heroic aspects of the character archetypes in The Longest Journey. Chapter six deals with Forster&amp / #8217 / s use of archetypal symbols in Howards End. Chapter seven focuses on Forster&amp / #8217 / s prophetic vision in A Passage to India, in which Forster exhibited a prophetic tone of voice and extended the scope of his archetypes. The purpose of this dissertation is to analyse E. M. Forster&amp / #8217 / s use of myth, recurrent mythical images and archetypal patterns in his efforts to communicate his vision of life. This study argues that Forster progresses from fantasy to prophecy. Depending on this progress, Forster&amp / #8217 / s archetypes evolve. This investigation familiarises the reader with how mythical motifs and archetypes enable the author to communicate his vision of reality, which is essentially timeless. Keywords: Mythology, Archetype
2

Mytologie příběhů Harryho Pottera / Mythology as a Source of the Harry Potter Series

VESELKOVÁ, Anna January 2014 (has links)
The aim of the diploma thesis, Mythology as a Source of the Harry Potter Series, is focused on inspirational sources which influenced the writer Joanne Kathleen Rowling. It organizes the mythology of characters and animals in successions of stories about Harry Potter. The basis of the thesis is the formulation of terms mythology, myth, Carl Gustav Jung's archetype and the analysis of encyclopaedic sources (Encyklopaedia Mythica). The main emphasis is put on the comparison of these features of mythology and archetype with literary characters and animals in particular stories about Harry Potter.

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