This essay is a comparative study of The Princess Diaries and Gossip Girl: A novel. The study aims to give support to the argument that teenage chick lit is a heterogeneous genre. Initially, the background to the essay is presented and then follows a presentation of the genre chick lit. Next, the method that is used in this essay is explained followed by a brief summary of the novels. Subsequently, the comparative study of how the novels handle several topics is presented. The topics discussed are friendship, family bonds, the importance of appearance, sex, and love. The discussion of each topic emphasises similarities and differences between the novels. Furthermore, the significance of the differences is analysed and discussed
The purpose of this Master’s thesis is to examine how the gender system is described in chick lit. T...
This thesis considers the sexual content, sexual archetypes, and implications of portrayed conseque...
There are a number of similarities between popular culture and women's writing: both have been dismi...
This essay is a comparative study of The Princess Diaries and Gossip Girl: A novel. The study aims t...
This essay focuses on the genre of Chick Lit and two novels in that genre: Confessions of a Shopahol...
This paper examines to what extent the distribution of the hundred most frequent function words of t...
Master's thesis in Literacy studiesThe present master’s thesis explores the chick lit genre in light...
The aim of the essay is to investigate how boys and girls are portrayed in the youth novel In the Ce...
Teenlit as a part of popular literature is chosen for research with the aim of describing 1) picture...
Abstract: Teenlit as a part of popular literature is chosen for research with the aim of describing ...
This study explores the hierarchy of symbolic value between literary and genre fiction through a dis...
This paper attempts to establish that the zeitgeist emerges from trends of the times and imprinted o...
In 1942, Maureen Daly published Seventeenth Summer, the wellspring text for a new genre of American ...
In 1927 Vladimir Propp published a book in which he defined the characteristics and morphology of fa...
Critics and readers often consider Nicholas Sparks’ novel The Notebook to be a romance novel, while ...
The purpose of this Master’s thesis is to examine how the gender system is described in chick lit. T...
This thesis considers the sexual content, sexual archetypes, and implications of portrayed conseque...
There are a number of similarities between popular culture and women's writing: both have been dismi...
This essay is a comparative study of The Princess Diaries and Gossip Girl: A novel. The study aims t...
This essay focuses on the genre of Chick Lit and two novels in that genre: Confessions of a Shopahol...
This paper examines to what extent the distribution of the hundred most frequent function words of t...
Master's thesis in Literacy studiesThe present master’s thesis explores the chick lit genre in light...
The aim of the essay is to investigate how boys and girls are portrayed in the youth novel In the Ce...
Teenlit as a part of popular literature is chosen for research with the aim of describing 1) picture...
Abstract: Teenlit as a part of popular literature is chosen for research with the aim of describing ...
This study explores the hierarchy of symbolic value between literary and genre fiction through a dis...
This paper attempts to establish that the zeitgeist emerges from trends of the times and imprinted o...
In 1942, Maureen Daly published Seventeenth Summer, the wellspring text for a new genre of American ...
In 1927 Vladimir Propp published a book in which he defined the characteristics and morphology of fa...
Critics and readers often consider Nicholas Sparks’ novel The Notebook to be a romance novel, while ...
The purpose of this Master’s thesis is to examine how the gender system is described in chick lit. T...
This thesis considers the sexual content, sexual archetypes, and implications of portrayed conseque...
There are a number of similarities between popular culture and women's writing: both have been dismi...