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The American Dream in the Media
The American Dream in the Media
Filip Akmačić
Many African Americans in the United States today have a negative view of the country’s racial progress. Despite their significant contributions in the settling and development of the country African Americans still have not achieved equal citizen’s rights as guaranteed by the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States. The present study has shown that through decades of hardships and inequality, African Americans have not been given an equal opportunity to...
The Animal Motif in Selected Works of Edgar Allan Poe
The Animal Motif in Selected Works of Edgar Allan Poe
Sandra Savanović
This paper analyzes the animal motif in Edgar Allan Poe’s selected works. It focuses on three animal motifs in four of Poe’s works – the short stories “The Black Cat,” “The Murders in the Rue Morgue,” and “Hop-Frog,” and the poem “The Raven.” The paper argues that the three animal motifs, the black cat, the raven, and the orangutan, personify certain elements of the human nature – feelings, emotions, human constructs, phenomena of the human society, and the stages of...
The Attitude towards Women in Kerouac's Novel On the Road
The Attitude towards Women in Kerouac's Novel On the Road
Andrea Štefić
The paper will discuss the Beat Generation, its historical background, aesthetics of writing, key figures of the movement, and their most prominent works, with special emphasis on features and publication of the novel On the Road. The thesis will also discuss the position of women throughout history and then explicitly analyze the attitudes of men towards women in Jack Kerouac’s novel On the Road. It will debate the perspective, behavior, and language used to describe and talk about women...
The Awakening of Edna Pontellier in Kate Chopin's "The Awakening"
The Awakening of Edna Pontellier in Kate Chopin's "The Awakening"
Mirijam Filipović
This diploma paper elaborately describes the awakening of Edna Pontellier’s character. She gains her independence, liberation of her real character and sexual desire through series of little awakenings. Women’s position in the late nineteenth century is being discussed, because in this novel, through the character of the main protagonist Edna, Kate Chopin is showing experiences of a woman trapped in that time. With her naturalistic narrative style Chopin has perfectly depicted a woman...
The Awakening of the "New Woman" in Nineteenth-Century American Literature
The Awakening of the "New Woman" in Nineteenth-Century American Literature
Maja Fabijanac
This paper discusses the development of female psyche in nineteenth century American literature. Three literary texts by prominent female authors were taken into consideration as a model for this research – the novel The Awakening (1899) written by Kate Chopin, Trifles (1916), a play in one act by Susan Glaspell, and A Room of One’s Own (1929), an essay on feminist criticism by Virginia Woolf. This paper is divided into three chapters, each discussing one particular author. Chapters...
The Battle Against Racial Discrimination in America: Peaceful Protests
The Battle Against Racial Discrimination in America: Peaceful Protests
Jelena Karakaš
The United States was created upon the claim that all men are created equal but when one takes a closer look into American history, it becomes evident that those who were not of the white race suffered discrimination, exploitation and deprivation of basic human and civil rights. Despite the hardships and hatred directed at them, the African Americans chose to gain equality and overcome the prejudices and discrimination by fighting violence using chiefly non-violent methods. The aim of the...
The Beat Generation and the American Counterculture of the 1960s
The Beat Generation and the American Counterculture of the 1960s
Izabela Tomakić
This paper analyzes and presents a survey of American mainstream culture of the 1950s, the Beat Generation, and the counterculture of the 1960s. Both the 1950s Beat movement and the hippie movement of the 1960s were a reaction to the affluent and materialistic capitalist society of the 1950s and 1960s. They emphasized uniqueness and beauty of the individual, and attacked the dehumanizing effects of materialism and industrialism. These movements were critical of the mainstream culture and its...
The Byronic Hero in Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights
The Byronic Hero in Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights
Dunja Dujić
Emily Brontë’s only novel Wuthering Heights challenged the traditional literary conventions due to its exploration of themes of desire, violence, and complexity of human emotions. Despite the initial neglect, the novel has gained recognition as a timeless classic. The archetypal hero created by Lord Byron served as an inspiration for Heathcliff, the protagonist of Wuthering Heights. This paper aims to analyze Heathcliff’s character by drawing upon the characteristics associated with the...
The Challenges of Translating Advertisements and Slogans
The Challenges of Translating Advertisements and Slogans
Ana Komljenović
The paper studies translations of advertisements based on the strategies used for translating advertisements and slogans. All the advertisements were translated or adapted from English into Croatian, and analysed according to a set of strategies, which are often used in the translation of advertisements. The set of strategies that is presented in the paper was made through a close examination of relevant literature in the field of advertising and translation. The main source of data for...
The Character Development in J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
The Character Development in J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
Antonia Maslak
J. K. Rowling’s novel Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone follows the seminal story of three eleven-year-old children named Harry Potter, Hermione Granger, and Ronald Weasley. Together, these three go from being complete strangers to the best of friends through all sorts of adventures they come across at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. The adventures, both big and small, range from sneaking out of their dormitories past curfew, over rescuing Hermione from a loose troll in...
The Child's Perspective in the Literature of the Marginalized
The Child's Perspective in the Literature of the Marginalized
Andrea Maksimović
The aim of the thesis is to analyze the strategy of using a child’s perspective in literary works concerning marginalization and discrimination of certain groups in the society. The thesis discusses the authors' choice of a child narrator and the effect it had on readers. Therefore, special attention is paid to the interpretation of social phenomena such as marginalization, racism, gender discrimination, and the effect that they have on child’s everyday life and family relationships,...
The Comparative Analysis of Murder and Crime-Solving Strategies in Agatha Christie's Works
The Comparative Analysis of Murder and Crime-Solving Strategies in Agatha Christie's Works
Vedran Domjanović
In Agatha Christie's literary career, which spanned over more than fifty years, the tally of murdered people in her mystery works approached three hundred. Her job as a nurse during World War I left a lasting mark on her career because during that period she developed a special interest in chemistry, poisons and drugs, which later influenced her writing style, and using poison became her forte. Consequently, many of her literary characters fell victim to some kind of toxin – arsenic,...

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