LACK OF MOTHER AND METAPHORS OF REUNION IN OLIVER TWIST AND JANE EYRE The aim of this paper is to discuss the psychological effects of being motherless and orphanhood and metaphors of reunion under social class distinction observation on the characters of two well known Victorian novels; Jane Eyre and Oliver Twist. Orphanhood means having no parents but in Victorian society this term also refers to “one who has deprived of only one parent” as Laura Peters states. As a
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Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München Department für Anglistik und Amerikanistik WS 2012/13 Proseminar : „Imagining Africa in 18th and 19th century British literature“ Dozentin: Dr. Sarah Fekadu Thema der Seminararbeit: Heart of Darkness and the ambivalence of imperialism Silvia Gerlsbeck Alfred-Schmidt-Str. 30 81379 München Email: silviagerlsbeck@googlemail.com Telefon: 0179 5351673 Matrikelnummer: 10359120 Studiengang: Lehramt Gymnasium‚ Fächer Deutsch‚ Englisch‚ EWS 5. Fachsemester Table
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C-internet Literature JANE AND THE FEMININE CHARACTERS IN JANE EYRE MARIA HOLMSTRÖM Martin Shaw Autumn 2007-01-22 Mid Sweden University Maria Holmström Mid Sweden University English C-net 2 Table of contents Introduction…………………………………………….…3 Aim…………………… ……………………………..… 5 Method………………………………………………….…5 Theory……………………………………………………..6 Jane’s five periods of her life into self discovery ………...7 Jane at Gateshead………………………………………….7 Jane at Lowood……………………………………………9 Jane at
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Chapter One Summary On his Granpa’s farm in the province of Natal in South Africa‚ an unnamed blonde infant is suckled by his black Zulu nanny. She sings to him of warriors and women washing at the baboons’ water hole. At five‚ the little boy’s mother has a nervous breakdown and he is sent to an Afrikaans boarding school. He is the youngest student by two years‚ and is hated because he is the only English-speaker in the school‚ which makes him a "rooinek" (Afrikaans for "redneck‚" a derogatory
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STUDY GUIDE FOR “DAVID COPPERFIELD” BY CHARLES DICKENS ------------------------------------------------- Context Charles Dickens was born on February 7‚ 1812‚ and spent the first ten years of his life in Kent‚ a marshy region by the sea in the east of England. Dickens was the second of eight children. His father‚ John Dickens‚ was a kind and likable man‚ but his financial irresponsibility placed him in enormous debt and caused tremendous strain on his family. When Charles was ten‚ his family
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to be a place where one can enjoy a materially enhanced and prosperous existence; the truth is that there is significantly more fulfilment in pastoral traditions and associations with the familiar‚ rural way of life. Dickens’ satirical bildungsroman Great Expectations depicts the changing attitudes of British society during the early nineteenth century‚ as wealth and prosperity was now not purely associated with familial relations and being born into nobility. ‘Dickens tried so earnestly to
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The Problem Inner Child in Holden Caulfield 1. Introduction 1.1 J.D. Salinger and His Works J.D. Salinger is a contemporary American novelist who rose to prominence with the publication of his sole full-length novel The Catcher in the Rye in 1951. Born in New York City in 1919‚ Salinger spent his youth as an introverted boy. At the age of 13 he enrolled in a decent prep school in Manhattan but was expelled from it one year later due to his poor academic performance. At age 15 he continued
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Foundations in ENGLISH LITERARY STUDIES Only study guide for ENG1501 Authors: Deirdre Byrne Fetson Kalua Ruth Scheepers Critical reader: Gwen Kane Department of English Studies University of South Africa Pretoria © 2012 University of South Africa All rights reserved Printed and published by the University of South Africa Mucklneuk‚ Pretoria ENG1501/1/2013–2015 98926381 InDesign‚ Florida HSY_Style Although every effort has been made to trace the copyright holders
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Persepolis Marjane Satrapi A Study guide Persepolis was originally published in France where it won several awards and wide acclaim. In 2003‚ the novel was published by Random House in the United States. Persepolis is a graphic novel which tells the story of its author and her childhood in Tehran‚ Iran. The novel details the author’s family life in the context of the 1979 Iranian Revolution‚ the overthrow of the Shah‚ and the resulting Iran-Iraq War. The book is drawn in a stark black and
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Four Feminist Novels by Margaret Atwood Helge Normann Nilsen University of Trondheim Most of Margaret Atwood’s early novels express a clearly feminist message.1 They fall under the category of fiction of protest‚ though this only rarely diminishes their artistic value. But‚ like other feminist writers‚ Atwood is very much concerned to demonstrate that women are oppressed in Western society and their options severely restricted. There are four novels which deal with this theme successfully:
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