I examine how Jane Eyre as an intertext is evoked in Rebecca from the perspectives of gender roles, the doubleness of the female characters and the Gothic mansions with their dark secrets, mysterious spaces and threatening atmosphere.BscAnglisztik
The paper is concerned with the history of the Gothic as well as the most eminent elements which det...
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë and Mrs Dalloway by Virginia Woolf are both crucial novels of the Engl...
Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre is a classic in women’s fiction. When it was published in 1847, it made...
This qualitative essay explores and compares women’s roles and identities in the gothic novels Rebec...
This qualitative essay explores and compares women’s roles and identities in the gothic novels Rebec...
The thesis explores the similarities and differences between Rebecca and Jane Eyre, with special foc...
Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte's 1847 novel, follows the protagonist, for whom the title is named, in a...
The objective of this thesis is to argue for and analyze the progression of women's agency in the fi...
This essay analyses and compares gender construction in Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë and Jane E...
The objective of this paper is to analyze three female characters from Victorian England novels: Cat...
Rereading Jane Eyre from the perspective of space can reveal several previously unnoticed layers of ...
This thesis discusses the contrasting publication and reception histories of Charlotte Bronte’s Jane...
This study employs Horace Walpole\u27s Castle of Otranto , Ann Radcliffe\u27s Mysteries of Udolpho, ...
The gothic romance novel is deeply rooted in the tradition of the Victorian era in which it was esta...
The aim of this work is to map a correlation between gender and space in selected Victorian and Mode...
The paper is concerned with the history of the Gothic as well as the most eminent elements which det...
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë and Mrs Dalloway by Virginia Woolf are both crucial novels of the Engl...
Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre is a classic in women’s fiction. When it was published in 1847, it made...
This qualitative essay explores and compares women’s roles and identities in the gothic novels Rebec...
This qualitative essay explores and compares women’s roles and identities in the gothic novels Rebec...
The thesis explores the similarities and differences between Rebecca and Jane Eyre, with special foc...
Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte's 1847 novel, follows the protagonist, for whom the title is named, in a...
The objective of this thesis is to argue for and analyze the progression of women's agency in the fi...
This essay analyses and compares gender construction in Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë and Jane E...
The objective of this paper is to analyze three female characters from Victorian England novels: Cat...
Rereading Jane Eyre from the perspective of space can reveal several previously unnoticed layers of ...
This thesis discusses the contrasting publication and reception histories of Charlotte Bronte’s Jane...
This study employs Horace Walpole\u27s Castle of Otranto , Ann Radcliffe\u27s Mysteries of Udolpho, ...
The gothic romance novel is deeply rooted in the tradition of the Victorian era in which it was esta...
The aim of this work is to map a correlation between gender and space in selected Victorian and Mode...
The paper is concerned with the history of the Gothic as well as the most eminent elements which det...
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë and Mrs Dalloway by Virginia Woolf are both crucial novels of the Engl...
Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre is a classic in women’s fiction. When it was published in 1847, it made...