This thesis examines three works: Margaret Atwood\u27s The Robber Bride and Alias Grace, and Angela Carter\u27s Nights at the Circus. All three novels feature female characters that contain elements or myth fragments of mermaids and sirens. The thesis asserts that the images of the mermaid and siren have undergone a gradual process of change, from literal mythical figures, to metaphorical images, and then to figures or myth fragments that reference the original mythical figures. The persistence of these female half-human images points to an underlying rationale that is independent of historical and cultural factors. Using feminist psychoanalytic theoretical frameworks, the thesis identifies the existence of the siren/mermaid myth fragments ...
During the Middle Ages, the siren transforms from its classical status as grotesque bird-woman into ...
In this thesis I will primarily examine how the retellings of Greek myths from the female perspectiv...
This thesis examines the way in which modern women writers use non-realistic literary forms in orde...
My thanks are due to the people who have supported and encouraged me through the writing of this the...
This thesis examines the use of myth and fairy tale in Angela Carter‘s The Magic Toyshop (1967) and ...
This project is an analysis of the utilization of mythmaking and human-animal relationships reflecte...
This thesis discusses chronologically, the adaptation and transformation of the Gothic in four of M...
The aim of this paper is to show how Atwood’s reformulations of myths contain hidden political messa...
Margaret Atwood's novella The Penelopiad presents a revisionary account of Homer's Odyssey from the ...
The paper analyzes Margaret Atwood’s postcolonial and postmodern feminist novels from the psychologi...
This project primarily addresses why there has been such expansion of interest among women writers i...
The thesis is composed of two parts: Believing in mermaids—the creation of persuasive underwater wor...
The article acquaints and explains the consideration of Margaret Atwood’s novels: ‘Surfacing’ (1972)...
This thesis attempts to analyze in what manner Angela Carter subverts the classical fairy tale`s dis...
Myths have been an undeniable source in both shaping and expressing the values, norms and behavioura...
During the Middle Ages, the siren transforms from its classical status as grotesque bird-woman into ...
In this thesis I will primarily examine how the retellings of Greek myths from the female perspectiv...
This thesis examines the way in which modern women writers use non-realistic literary forms in orde...
My thanks are due to the people who have supported and encouraged me through the writing of this the...
This thesis examines the use of myth and fairy tale in Angela Carter‘s The Magic Toyshop (1967) and ...
This project is an analysis of the utilization of mythmaking and human-animal relationships reflecte...
This thesis discusses chronologically, the adaptation and transformation of the Gothic in four of M...
The aim of this paper is to show how Atwood’s reformulations of myths contain hidden political messa...
Margaret Atwood's novella The Penelopiad presents a revisionary account of Homer's Odyssey from the ...
The paper analyzes Margaret Atwood’s postcolonial and postmodern feminist novels from the psychologi...
This project primarily addresses why there has been such expansion of interest among women writers i...
The thesis is composed of two parts: Believing in mermaids—the creation of persuasive underwater wor...
The article acquaints and explains the consideration of Margaret Atwood’s novels: ‘Surfacing’ (1972)...
This thesis attempts to analyze in what manner Angela Carter subverts the classical fairy tale`s dis...
Myths have been an undeniable source in both shaping and expressing the values, norms and behavioura...
During the Middle Ages, the siren transforms from its classical status as grotesque bird-woman into ...
In this thesis I will primarily examine how the retellings of Greek myths from the female perspectiv...
This thesis examines the way in which modern women writers use non-realistic literary forms in orde...