Showing 1 - 20 results of 175 for search '"Bildungsroman"', query time: 0.09s Refine Results
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    From bildungsroman to geschäftsroman: the posthuman neoliberal novel by AlAmmouri, Bayan, Salman, Dina

    Published 2021
    “…The authors argue that the decentralization of the human, triggered by posthumanism, and the commodification of the genre of the novel, triggered by neoliberalism, transformed the most popular subgenre of the novel, the bildungsroman into a geschäftsroman. There is considerable evidence that indicates that many contemporary novels no longer focus on the growth of human beings, but rather on the growth of businesses, instead. …”
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    Article
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    Female Bildungsroman In Contemporary Chinese Transnational Literature by Jiang, Ling

    Published 2019
    “…In this study, I explore the female bildungsroman in Chinese transnational literature in English written by overseas Chinese female writers. …”
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    Book Section
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    Lygia Fagundes Telles e o Bildungsroman no Brasil by Pedro Dolabela Chagas

    Published 2019-01-01
    Subjects: “…bildungsroman…”
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    Article
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    Fiksyen Zhang Gui Xing dari perspektif Bildungsroman by Chua, Geok Kwee

    Published 2020
    Subjects: “…Bildungsromans, Chinese…”
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    Thesis
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    The foreshadowing of bildungsroman in the character development of the characters in William Shakespeare's plays by Chong, Jiayu

    Published 2014
    “…(De Grazia 355) This quality is the character development of Shakespeare’s plays foreshadows the literary movement of Bildungsroman…”
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    Final Year Project (FYP)
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    ‘Drawd too architectooralooral’: Charles Dickens, the Bildungsroman and the spatial imagination by Dasgupta, U

    Published 2020
    “…Such houses have typically been excluded from Heideggerian–Bachelardian readings of architectural space, yet Dasgupta argues that imaginative engagement with the rented house significantly informs the plots of the nineteenth-century <i>Bildungsroman</i>. Focusing on <i>David Copperfield</i> and <i>Great Expectations</i>, she demonstrates that Dickens’ metaphors of rented space indicate how his narrators perceive the world around them, make sense of their lives and express themselves on paper. …”
    Book section
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