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Tétel Korlátozottan hozzáférhető Heroines Striving to Control their Own Lives(2014-03-27T09:07:38Z) Weidisch, Edit; Séllei, Nóra; DE--TEK--Bölcsészettudományi KarJane Eyre, Shirley Keeldar and Caroline Helstone are unconventional heroines who have their own opinions and who are brave enough to declare them. They are not shown as passive figures who are the victims of circumstances but as active women who are ready to influence their lives as much as it is possible in their age. They strive to control their own lives which is an unusual desire in the Victorian era. Therefore they set an example that is worth following and that is why I decided to examine them more thoroughly.Tétel Korlátozottan hozzáférhető How to Use Literature in the Second Language ClassroomWeidisch, Edit; Fekete, Adrienn; DE--Bölcsészettudományi KarIn this paper, I discuss the role of culture in the second language classroom. I focus on one specific part of culture which is literature. I claim that it is of great importance to incorporate the teaching of culture and literature into the second language class since they help to increase cultural awareness, understand cultural similarities and differences. They also help to decrease the risks of misunderstanding, which is often rooted in unknown cultural differences. The aim of language teaching is to raise adaptable, tolerant and sensitive citizens, and literature and culture contribute to this process.Tétel Korlátozottan hozzáférhető "You thought to disgrace me, did you, by running away and turning [an] artist": A Woman as an Artist in Anne Brontë's The Tenant of Wildfell HallWeidisch, Edit; Séllei, Nóra; DE--Bölcsészettudományi KarIn my thesis I analyse the situation and treatment of a female artist in Anne Brontë’s The Tenant of Wildfell Hall. The woman artist was practically an oxymoron in the Victorian period, due to the construction of Victorian femininity and female spaces. Thus I argue that Helen Huntingdon is a special heroine, who is able to gain control over her own life and to become a professional artist, even if her ambition is motivated by the most traditional desire of a woman: to protect her son and raise him properly. However, this traditional desire inspires Helen to take transgressive steps. Moreover, men are also of great importance in the novel, so it is necessary to discuss Victorian masculinity as well. Actually, the novel deals with problems that are still relevant today, for instance, domestic violence and abuse or the financial dependence of women and children.