Focusing on the enduring impact of Jane Austen's works, this thesis explores how her love stories have transcended time, remaining beloved and relevant in contemporary literature. It highlights Austen's unique ability to resonate with readers across generations, showcasing her as a pivotal figure in English literature. The study emphasizes the depth of analysis surrounding her novels, underscoring their significance in literary discourse and their continued enchantment of audiences today.
World literature is full of great love stories, but there are few that make it through the centuries and are as well-known and loved today as they were decades ago. One of those stories that have the ability to leave an everlasting impression is Jane Austen's best-known and probably most famous novel Pride and Prejudice (1813). Its appeal to literary posteriority lies in the astonishing emotional impact of a seemingly simple A clever girl and a mysterious man, destined for one another, loathe each other from the very beginning because of wrong first impression and bad influence from others. They gradually have to overcome these obstacles in order to recognise the nobility of each other's characters and find happiness together. From Austen's contemporary writing and its scarce possibilities for women writers on to the emancipation of the female author up until the possibilities for women novelists in the lately developing genre labelled chick lit - Pride and Prejudice still continues to fascinate readers and writers alike. This book sets out to examine how Austen's formula was put to use to yield three contemporary works of British fiction; Kate Fenton's Lions and Liquorice (1995), Helen Fielding's Bridget Jones's Diary (1996) and Melissa Nathan's Pride, Prejudice and Jasmin Field (2000) and what transformations it has experienced in the process.
Die Arbeit untersucht die Anwendbarkeit der Anomietheorie von Émile Durkheim auf moderne Phänomene der Bindungslosigkeit in der Gesellschaft. Ziel ist es, zu analysieren, inwieweit Durkheims Theorien aus dem 19. Jahrhundert zur Erklärung zeitgenössischer sozialer Prozesse geeignet sind. Dabei wird die These vertreten, dass Durkheims Ansatz wertvolle Erkenntnisse für das Verständnis aktueller gesellschaftlicher Herausforderungen liefern kann. Die Arbeit erhielt die Note 1,3 und stellt einen Beitrag zur soziologischen Theorie dar.
Die Bachelorarbeit untersucht, wie in der DDR klassische Rollenklischees überwunden werden sollten, basierend auf Analysen von Fibeln des Verlags "Volk und Wissen". Sie analysiert Veränderungen der Geschlechterdarstellungen nach der Wiedervereinigung und stützt sich auf poststrukturalistische Ansätze sowie Judith Butlers feministische Theorien.