Heroism : rising from the ashes

The concept of heroism and the portrayal of heroes have undergone many changes over the ages, departing from its classical precedents. The Hero was once the exemplary model of individuality, chivalry, morality and other noble ideals, but the rise of satire on chivalric literature in the 17th Century...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Oh, Karen Jia Lin
Other Authors: Jernigan, Daniel Keith
Format: Final Year Project (FYP)
Language:English
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14529
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author Oh, Karen Jia Lin
author2 Jernigan, Daniel Keith
author_facet Jernigan, Daniel Keith
Oh, Karen Jia Lin
author_sort Oh, Karen Jia Lin
collection NTU
description The concept of heroism and the portrayal of heroes have undergone many changes over the ages, departing from its classical precedents. The Hero was once the exemplary model of individuality, chivalry, morality and other noble ideals, but the rise of satire on chivalric literature in the 17th Century subjected him to increased scepticism and contradictory portrayals. Consequently, today it appears as if the Hero has altogether vanished from contemporary writing, which now favours the common rather than extraordinary. However, rather than saying that the Hero is dead, it is more accurate to say that the Hero has been evolving. Even today, the definition of heroism and our understanding of what constitutes a hero continue to shift. Despite the endless shifts and current scepticism on heroism, there still seem to be traces of classical heroism found in contemporary society. Through an essay and 12 original poems, this creative writing project explores some aspects of heroism in the hope of finding remnants of classical heroism in the contemporary. Perhaps heroism will rise from its seeming ashes.
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spelling ntu-10356/145292019-12-10T11:03:25Z Heroism : rising from the ashes Oh, Karen Jia Lin Jernigan, Daniel Keith School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Humanities::Literature::English The concept of heroism and the portrayal of heroes have undergone many changes over the ages, departing from its classical precedents. The Hero was once the exemplary model of individuality, chivalry, morality and other noble ideals, but the rise of satire on chivalric literature in the 17th Century subjected him to increased scepticism and contradictory portrayals. Consequently, today it appears as if the Hero has altogether vanished from contemporary writing, which now favours the common rather than extraordinary. However, rather than saying that the Hero is dead, it is more accurate to say that the Hero has been evolving. Even today, the definition of heroism and our understanding of what constitutes a hero continue to shift. Despite the endless shifts and current scepticism on heroism, there still seem to be traces of classical heroism found in contemporary society. Through an essay and 12 original poems, this creative writing project explores some aspects of heroism in the hope of finding remnants of classical heroism in the contemporary. Perhaps heroism will rise from its seeming ashes. Bachelor of Arts 2008-11-27T03:06:52Z 2008-11-27T03:06:52Z 2008 2008 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14529 en 35 p. application/pdf
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities::Literature::English
Oh, Karen Jia Lin
Heroism : rising from the ashes
title Heroism : rising from the ashes
title_full Heroism : rising from the ashes
title_fullStr Heroism : rising from the ashes
title_full_unstemmed Heroism : rising from the ashes
title_short Heroism : rising from the ashes
title_sort heroism rising from the ashes
topic DRNTU::Humanities::Literature::English
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14529
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