National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Great American Myths: Nation-Building and Identity Politics in the United States of America
Pyshkin, Dmitry ; Veselá, Pavla (advisor) ; Robbins, David Lee (referee)
This thesis attempts to analyze the American Thesis, also the American Creed or the American Ideology (the terms as used by Anatol Lieven in America Right or Wrong: An Anatomy of American Nationalism) as the United States` national identity. In interaction with a set of national myths, the American Thesis constitutes the narrative of US America`s identity, the nation`s 'common sense' and morality. The thesis begins with the definition of the phenomenon of the nation as a political and cultural community, then proceeds to discuss the specific contexts from which the narrative image of the US nation emerged. Next, the thesis studies the American Creed as the cultural instrument of fostering social cohesion and assimilating uncanonical dissent. Finally, the myths of US nationalism are analyzed in the context of their narrative structure and affective dynamics which account for the ontological and emotive power of the American Thesis. Key words: the USA, US nationalism, the American Creed, myth, nation-building, national identity
Angela Carter`s Fairy Tale: Myths of Gender and Sexuality
Pyshkin, Dmitry ; Nováková, Soňa (advisor) ; Znojemská, Helena (referee)
This thesis attempts to analyze in what manner Angela Carter subverts the classical fairy tale`s discourse as regards its portrayal of sexuality, and affords the readers a new perspective on the genre that has never been thoroughly addressed. In the first chapter, I have commented on the objectives Carter pursues in the framework of her revisionist project while choosing the fairy tale as its primary basis, and the way the writer approaches the discussion of the genre as a repository of mythical constructions, as understood by a French literary scholar and philologist, Roland Barthes. In the following chapters, I have focused on different manifestations of human sexuality that Carter depicts in her work, namely the sexuality of subjugation and domination, sexuality of reciprocity and otherness, as well as the problematics inherent in the phenomenon as such. Key words Angela Carter, fairy tale, myth, narrative myth, political myth, sexuality, demythologization

Interested in being notified about new results for this query?
Subscribe to the RSS feed.