The thesis examines different representations of literary orphans in a selection of books for children published between 1879 and 1911. The four chosen texts are Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876), J. M. Barrie’s Peter and Wendy (1911), L. Frank Baum’s The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900), and Frances Hodgson Burnett’s The Secret Garden (1910). The study looks at significant gender differences in the process of the orphan’s adaptation to his/her social environment. It also shows how orphans turn their miseries into actions and how they serve their society when they are given the opportunity. The selected texts are going to be analysed according to a gender-based comparison and close reading of the journeys taken by their male and...
Maria Konopnicka’s Fairy Tale On Dwarves and a Little Orphan Girl Mary as an Example of Polish Orpha...
From Oliver Twist to Jane Eyre, Becky Sharp to Jude Fawley, the nineteenth-century British literary ...
This work examines JM Barrie\u27s Peter Pan in light of its cultural context. It works to show how t...
Orphan stories in children’s literature are rich and complex, and they have historically permeated t...
This paper focuses on the issue of orphans in the nineteenth and the twentieth century. The thesis a...
235 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1981.In early Victorian fiction, o...
Orphan children in literature often occupy the spaces of reality and fantasy simultaneously because ...
Orphaned characters abound in twentieth-century fiction, but critical studies of the significance of...
This diploma thesis deals with the portrayal of child heroes in English and American literature, in ...
Considered one of the most famous stories ever written among children’s literature, Peter Pan (1904)...
Centuries’ worth of tales about the forlorn exist. Being a familiar muse for authors and a favorite ...
This article deals with literary depictions of social, political, cultural and religious circumstanc...
This thesis examines the role of the orphan benefactor relationship in Oliver Twist (1838), Great Ex...
This senior thesis project explores the prevalence of the orphan figure in literature, from the rise...
Hegemonic visions of what the human body and mind should be pervade the literature of the late ninet...
Maria Konopnicka’s Fairy Tale On Dwarves and a Little Orphan Girl Mary as an Example of Polish Orpha...
From Oliver Twist to Jane Eyre, Becky Sharp to Jude Fawley, the nineteenth-century British literary ...
This work examines JM Barrie\u27s Peter Pan in light of its cultural context. It works to show how t...
Orphan stories in children’s literature are rich and complex, and they have historically permeated t...
This paper focuses on the issue of orphans in the nineteenth and the twentieth century. The thesis a...
235 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1981.In early Victorian fiction, o...
Orphan children in literature often occupy the spaces of reality and fantasy simultaneously because ...
Orphaned characters abound in twentieth-century fiction, but critical studies of the significance of...
This diploma thesis deals with the portrayal of child heroes in English and American literature, in ...
Considered one of the most famous stories ever written among children’s literature, Peter Pan (1904)...
Centuries’ worth of tales about the forlorn exist. Being a familiar muse for authors and a favorite ...
This article deals with literary depictions of social, political, cultural and religious circumstanc...
This thesis examines the role of the orphan benefactor relationship in Oliver Twist (1838), Great Ex...
This senior thesis project explores the prevalence of the orphan figure in literature, from the rise...
Hegemonic visions of what the human body and mind should be pervade the literature of the late ninet...
Maria Konopnicka’s Fairy Tale On Dwarves and a Little Orphan Girl Mary as an Example of Polish Orpha...
From Oliver Twist to Jane Eyre, Becky Sharp to Jude Fawley, the nineteenth-century British literary ...
This work examines JM Barrie\u27s Peter Pan in light of its cultural context. It works to show how t...