In this essay, using the theories of psychiatrist, Eric Berne and his script theory; psychoanalyst, Carl Jung and his archetypes and mandalas; as well as the Native American Medicine Wheel; and the Hindu notion of the kundalini, I analyze the psychological development of Adele Quested of E.M. Forster’s A Passage to India (1924) and Anna Wulf of Doris Lessing’s The Golden Notebook (1962). Adela Quested goes to India seeking the real India and while engaging the archetype of the Lover discovers her real Self. While in India she metaphorically walks the Medicine Wheel and discovers that to be whole she must balance her ability to think with her ability to feel. Anna Wulf’s psychological development requires her to walk the Medicine Wheel and d...
This thesis analyzed the “Ever After High: The Storybook of Legends” series by Shannon Hale using li...
This thesis, a fiction novella, examines themes of nostalgia, perception against reality, redemption...
Because of woman's peculiar relationship to language, and therefore to the means of comprehending an...
In this essay, using the theories of psychiatrist, Eric Berne and his script theory; psychoanalyst, ...
The major problem of this study is how effort Tami/a Soroush to get a better life and the objective ...
A Passage to India is the magnum opus of E. M. Forster—a famous English novelist in the first half o...
Personal histories, public events, geographic location, and cultural forces interact at the level of...
This essay will be presented in two parts. The first part contains the opening chapter of my novel, ...
Purpose/Objective of the Study: Sudha Murthy through her novels empowers women and motivates them to...
This study is proposed to reveal how is the importance of loving in life reflected in Eloisa James’s...
This study aims to describe the philosophical ideas and characters containing in trilogy of 'RaraMen...
The effects of literature throughout history have been innumerable, but they never seem more signifi...
The problem of this study is the ambition to live is very important to achieve success in life Greg ...
The idea of ‘literature we can live by’ crystallizes the paradox of art: defined by its distance fro...
This study discusses the psychological journey of the female heroine in Margaret Atwood's Surfacing....
This thesis analyzed the “Ever After High: The Storybook of Legends” series by Shannon Hale using li...
This thesis, a fiction novella, examines themes of nostalgia, perception against reality, redemption...
Because of woman's peculiar relationship to language, and therefore to the means of comprehending an...
In this essay, using the theories of psychiatrist, Eric Berne and his script theory; psychoanalyst, ...
The major problem of this study is how effort Tami/a Soroush to get a better life and the objective ...
A Passage to India is the magnum opus of E. M. Forster—a famous English novelist in the first half o...
Personal histories, public events, geographic location, and cultural forces interact at the level of...
This essay will be presented in two parts. The first part contains the opening chapter of my novel, ...
Purpose/Objective of the Study: Sudha Murthy through her novels empowers women and motivates them to...
This study is proposed to reveal how is the importance of loving in life reflected in Eloisa James’s...
This study aims to describe the philosophical ideas and characters containing in trilogy of 'RaraMen...
The effects of literature throughout history have been innumerable, but they never seem more signifi...
The problem of this study is the ambition to live is very important to achieve success in life Greg ...
The idea of ‘literature we can live by’ crystallizes the paradox of art: defined by its distance fro...
This study discusses the psychological journey of the female heroine in Margaret Atwood's Surfacing....
This thesis analyzed the “Ever After High: The Storybook of Legends” series by Shannon Hale using li...
This thesis, a fiction novella, examines themes of nostalgia, perception against reality, redemption...
Because of woman's peculiar relationship to language, and therefore to the means of comprehending an...