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The epic of sentiment: Hongloumeng and the fictionality of heoric selves陳以德, Chan, Yee-tak. January 1998 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Chinese / Master / Master of Philosophy
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Der bürgerliche Held in den Komödien Carl SternheimsFehr, Hans Otto, Sternheim, Carl, January 1968 (has links)
Thesis--Freiburg i. B. / Bibliography: p. 151-154.
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William Morris and the development of a heroic ideal : Old Norse works 1868-1876Felce, Ian January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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Acte et passion du héros essai sur l'actualité d'Homère /Beaujon, Edmond. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral), also published: Genève : Impr. de la Tribune Genève, 1948.
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The first adventure of Raspberry and Lime : a futuristic screenplay /Mims, Sarah E., January 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A.)--Eastern Illinois University, 2009. / Includes bibliographical references.
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William Faulkner's Thomas Sutpen, Quentin Compson, Joe Christmas a study of the hero-archetype /Miller, Bernice Berger, January 1977 (has links)
Thesis--University of Florida. / Description based on print version record. Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 146-156).
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Failure as device subversion of the positive hero in Russian fellow-traveler prose of the 1920s /Sattinger, Dianne. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1994. / Typescript. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 279-296).
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Diaphaneité in Walter Pater's delineation of the heroVarty, Anne January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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The hero in Sophocles’ TrachiniaeShigley, Laurie Eileen January 1977 (has links)
The Trachiriiae has been seen as something of an anomaly among Sophocles' seven extant plays. It is the only play that is not named for its hero, and critics have argued variously that Deianeira, or Heracles, or both Deianeira and Heracles are the heroes of the play. This thesis seeks to establish Deianeira as the hero of the Trachiriiae.
In order to provide an objective model against which both Deianeira and Heracles can be measured, a summary of eight views of the Sophoclean tragic hero, excluding references to the Trachiriiae, is presented. Emphasis is given to the heroic model of B.M.W. Knox, who himself, believing that the Trachiriiae is not clearly based on the figure of a tragic hero, excludes it from his development of a heroic model.
The models of the Sophoclean hero do apply to the Trachiniae, and Deianeira, not Heracles, is the hero. The lives and deaths of Deianeira and Heracles are interrelated in the closest possible way, but by looking with a discerning eye, one discovers that Deianeira is the leading dramatic figure. Deianeira fulfills the heroic characteristics, including those presented by Knox, remarkably well. Within the play, Deianeira faces the supreme, crisis of her life. Isolated in time and space to a profound degree, she finds the source and greatness of her free and responsible action of trying to recover Heracles' love within herself alone. Even though she acts out of love for Heracles, her dependence on the power of the "charms" of the lbve-philtre suggests defiance of and withdrawal from Cypris' will and power. By her act, she becomes totally and tragically isolated from men and abandoned by the gods. She destroys Heracles, her one key to the worlds outside and inside herself.
By her love, she destroys what she most loves, and her own identity. Like Ajax, she is unwilling to live without that identity, and so, in a quiet display of nobility and strength, sacrifices herself to the same love that made her unwittingly sacrifice Heracles. Throughout the play it is Deianeira's will and strength that cause arid suffer the dramatic movement and tension. It is her will to obtain the truth about Iole from Lichas, to send the anointed robe to Heracles, and to die without attempting to receive forgiveness from Hyllus of Heracles. Deianeira's will and fate act upon Heracles. Heracles belongs to her but she does not belong to him and hence it is she who is dramatically independent. The destruction of Heracles is a direct result of an action of her will and is the culmination of her tragedy.
Heracles does not rise to meet his fate but is full of bitterness against the fate that has brought him down at the hands of a woman. Unlike Deianeira, who within the course of the play reaches her end and fulfills her heroic will, Heracles does not meet his final end, death and release from his labors; nor does he hold any control over his destiny. He is helpless and weak in his suffering until he hears Nessus' name, at which time he accepts the inevitability of his fate. Throughout the play he is treated more as a force thaxi a person. Nor is he independent; he is a slave to the metaphorical voooz of his passion and its physical manifestations. His catastrophe is the result of his general depravity rather than a single error. He accepts no responsibility for any of his actions and is, in fact, a pawn in the action of the series of events set in motion by Deianeira. His own action is merely in response to Deianeira's and exercises110 control over the outcome of the play's events. When he realizes the inevitability of his death, all action has already been taken. Nor is Heracles truly isolated. He is, instead, extremely self-centered. His self-centeredness is at its most obvious during his suffering, which he is not able to endure and so to rise to the stature of a moral hero. He will meet his death without having risen above his own nature; his death will mark the end of his life and sufferings, but nothing more. Heracles does not satisfy many of the characteristics ascribed to other Sophoclean heroes. He could hardly be considered the hero of his scene, let alone of the entire play. In the play's structure, Heracles exists because of Deianeira, whose life and death do have a purpose in the play. In fact, Heracles is the unheroic with which the heroic Deianeira is contrasted.
Heracles does not appear until Deianeira has killed herself for love of him, and the total terror of his self-centered existence is the realization of the full tragedy of her life and death. His appearance at the end of the play and complete lack of interest in her death and innocence consummate, her tragedy. One looks at Heracles to see what the object of Deianeira's great love really is.
The play is named for the Chorus instead of for Deianeira. In this respect, the relationship between Deianeira and the Chorus is significant. Deianeira appears to a certain degree to be the leader of the Chorus of Trachinian maidens. The similarity of their status to that of the maiden Deianeira's points to them as universalizing agents of the personal and tragic life of Deianeira, the hero of the Trachiniae. / Arts, Faculty of / Classical, Near Eastern and Religious Studies, Department of / Graduate
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Thinking blondes and heroes : interpreting Jungian theory and hero stories for women's psychology /Marlow, Beth M. January 1997 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wollongong, 1997. / Typescript. Bibliographical references: leaf 263-278.
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