Myths and Existential Masks in John Fowles's "The Magus"
Název práce v češtině: | Mýty a existenciální masky v románu Johna Fowlese "Mág" |
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Název v anglickém jazyce: | Myths and Existential Masks in John Fowles's "The Magus" |
Klíčová slova: | mytologie|masky|hra|existencialismus|divadlo|Fowles|Mág |
Klíčová slova anglicky: | mythology|masks|play|existentialism|theatre|Fowles|The Magus |
Akademický rok vypsání: | 2015/2016 |
Typ práce: | bakalářská práce |
Jazyk práce: | angličtina |
Ústav: | Ústav anglofonních literatur a kultur (21-UALK) |
Vedoucí / školitel: | PhDr. Zdeněk Beran, Ph.D. |
Řešitel: | skrytý - zadáno a potvrzeno stud. odd. |
Datum přihlášení: | 09.06.2016 |
Datum zadání: | 09.06.2016 |
Schválení administrátorem: | zatím neschvalováno |
Datum potvrzení stud. oddělením: | 23.06.2016 |
Datum a čas obhajoby: | 04.09.2018 00:00 |
Datum odevzdání elektronické podoby: | 08.08.2018 |
Datum proběhlé obhajoby: | 04.09.2018 |
Odevzdaná/finalizovaná: | odevzdaná studentem a finalizovaná |
Oponenti: | PhDr. Soňa Nováková, CSc. |
Zásady pro vypracování |
In John Fowles’s novel The Magus, the protagonist Nicholas Urfe is subject to a series of metatheatrical illusions created by a Greek eccentric recluse named Maurice Conchis, the eponymous magus of the title. Increasingly crueller and more surreal, the tricks and peculiar performances are parts of a scheme designed to rouse Nicholas from his life of egotistical freedom and existential inauthenticity. The employment of myths and masks plays a vital role in Nicholas’s “initiation” and in the overall theme of the novel. The thesis and aim of this work is to illustrate, on the various techniques in which the mentioned myths and masks are exploited, both in the immediate plot and Nicholas’s narrative voice, the interrelations of mythologies and masks with the inauthenticity of Nicholas’s existence. Through the analysis of The Magus, this text will focus on the means in which the theatrical disguises work as an extension of Urfe’s own social masks. In the first part of the study, a connection between the classical myth of ancient Greece and the modern myth and their meanings will be focused on together with its literary employment in the postmodern narrative of Fowles’s novel, using the works of several modern and postmodern theorists and writers. In the second part, the relationship of the employed mythologies and the existentialist aspects of the novel will be drawn, paying attention to the ways in which both features combine in the protagonist’s experience, and, lastly, the third part will engage with the position of the examined topic in the context of John Fowles’s work, illustrating its significance throughout the author’s literary creation. |
Seznam odborné literatury |
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