Redefining Gender Relationship and Identity in Angela Carter's The Bloody Chamber

dc.contributor.advisorSéllei, Nóra
dc.contributor.authorSanyó, Olívia
dc.contributor.departmentDE--TEK--Bölcsészettudományi Karhu_HU
dc.date.accessioned2013-10-03T08:17:23Z
dc.date.available2013-10-03T08:17:23Z
dc.date.created2008-04-14
dc.date.issued2013-10-03T08:17:23Z
dc.description.abstractThe Bloody Chamber is a collection of short stories, based on well-known fairy tales, like Red Riding Hood or The Beauty and the Beast, which were rewritten by Angela Carter. She used these tales of the common knowledge to reconsider the value-system represented in these stories, concentrating on the gender issues: relationship and hierarchy between the sexes, female and male attributes—like passivity and activity, victim and victor, object versus subject position—sexuality; and all related topics, like the problems of forming an autonomous, independent identity under the pressure of patriarchal society. She tries to depict new situations and create more conscious heroines in her tales who bear the ability to change their prescribed fate in the phallocentric scenario.hu_HU
dc.description.courseangol nyelv és irodalomhu_HU
dc.description.degreeegyetemihu_HU
dc.format.extent40hu_HU
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2437/173476
dc.language.isoenhu_HU
dc.subjectgender studieshu_HU
dc.subjectfeminismhu_HU
dc.subject.dspaceDEENK Témalista::Irodalomtudomány::Összehasonlító irodalomtudományhu_HU
dc.titleRedefining Gender Relationship and Identity in Angela Carter's The Bloody Chamberhu_HU
dc.typediplomamunka
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