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To what extent do magical realist texts offer a feminist perspective?

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Magical realism, as ‘a mode suited to exploring- and transgressing- boundaries’ , is useful for feminist objectives. The genre challenges dominant ways of seeing the world and can therefore be used to contest androcentric worldviews. In The House of the Spirits (1985), for example, the use of the supernatural empowers the women of the Trueba household. In Nights at the Circus (1984) the magically realist body of Fevvers is a symbolic representation of the New Woman. In both texts, however, t...

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Develop an argument that analyses, through contrast and comparison, the use of the unconventional couple as a dramatic device in the plays The Homecoming and Suddenly Last Summer. What does your comparison lead you to conclude about the different thematic

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Many modern dramas feature an unconventional couple. From Kane’s coupling of Hippolytus and Phaedra, to Parks’s pairing of Booth and Lincoln, playwrights use the unconventional couple as a device to explore the different thematic interests of their plays. In The Homecoming (1965), for example, Pinter dramatises the unconventional relationships formed between Max, his sons, and Teddy’s wife. Suddenly Last Summer (1958), however, centres on the potentially incestuous couplings of Mrs Venable...

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Essay discussing ideas of masculinity and emotion in The Grapes of Wrath and The Sun Also Rises.

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Steinbeck and Hemingway both explore how masculinity can affect, and be affected by emotions. In The Grapes of Wrath (1939), for example, Steinbeck considers how masculinity can be strengthened by a man’s refusal to break down. Conversely, in The Sun Also Rises (1926), Hemingway explores how emotional breakdown can occur as a consequence of emasculation. Whereas Steinbeck upholds traditional masculine values and a demonstration of keeping ones emotions in check, Hemingway envisages a renewed s...

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‘The history of postmodern American fiction belongs to those authors who, in any idiom and for any audience, for brief passages or for entire careers, shared a new cultural sensibility as a response to an altered world’ (Paula Geyh, Fred G. Leebron, and A

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Postmodern American fiction responds to the economic and social changes that occurred in America, and the globalised world, post-World War Two. This altered world required innovative modes of representation that could reflect the new cultural sensibility of the authors. Auster and DeLillo, for example, are part of this postmodern movement of formal innovation. The hallmarks of literary postmodernism frame The New York Trilogy (1986) and Cosmopolis (2003). Indeed, by evaluating the concept of the...

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The disciplinary function of early crime narratives is subverted by their status as commodities. To what extent do you agree with this statement?

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In early crime narratives a tension exists between the intended disciplinary function and the entertainment value demanded by their status as commodities. The Ordinary Accounts and the criminal broadsides, for example, acted as an indirect form of state-controlled surveillance. This ideological policing, however, is balanced against the commercial obligation to appeal to a wide readership. Indeed, the sensational nature of early crime narratives arguably undermines their disciplinary purpose of ...

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In what ways do the novels Waterland and Austerlitz present the two world wars as challenges to philosophies of historical progress?

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An analysis of the way in which progress in relation to WWI and WWII is presented in the novels, Waterland (Graham Swift) and Austerlitz (W.G. Sebald). The notion of human progress is challenged by WWI and WWII and the impact it has on the lives of the characters in the novels. The wars resemble a descent into animalistic primitivism and the collapse of the progress of the enlightenment.

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How does Shakespeare explore nature versus nurture in “The Tempest”?

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Exploration of Nature Vs Nurture in Shakespeare's The Tempest. Focussing on Caliban and his relationship with the island and with Prospero.

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Explore the relationship between place, belonging, and identity as represented in at least two Caribbean texts

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Caribbean texts are preoccupied by the relationship between place, belonging, and identity. The formation of a distinct national identity has been undermined by the historical processes that shaped the Caribbean. Consequently, Caribbean literature explores the ramifications of colonialism on the people’s sense of belonging.

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Formulate an argument that examines the ways in which authorial voice is translated into an adaptation.

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In depth assessment of how Peter Shaffer's play, Amadeus has been translated into film and how the authorial voice translates from stage to screen.

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