Reading the Romantic Heroine: Text, History, Ideology |
Contents
CHAPTER | 1 |
Manon Lescaut | 50 |
AlainFourniers Big Meaulnes | 134 |
Copyright | |
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according adventure appears authors becomes beginning Big Meaulnes Black Brontë calls Caroline castration century character codes contradiction critics culture describe desire discourse dominant economic elements excluded exist experience expresses feelings feminine force François French Further gives Grieux hand Harlequin hero heroines historical ideal identity ideology individual interpretation Isolde Julien Kristeva language literary literature lived logic Manon Lescaut Mark masculine Mathilde meaning Meaulnes's mother myth narrative narrator nature novel object Paris passion practice presents Press production quest readers reality references reflection relations remains Rênal represents Robert role romance romantic love says scene seeks separate sexual Shirley shows social society story structure struggle symbolic takes tells textual tion tradition transformation Translation Tristan Tristan and Isolde University Press voice woman women writing York