Names and their underlying mythology in J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter-Novels
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Sprache:Englisch
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Erscheinungsdatum
11.09.2008
Verlag
GRINSeitenzahl
25 (Printausgabe)
Dateigröße
463 KB
Auflage
1. Auflage
Sprache
Englisch
EAN
9783640162567
Seminar paper from the year 2008 in the subject English Language and Literature Studies - Literature, grade: 1,3, University of Leipzig (Institut für Anglistik), course: Harry Potter and The End, language: English, abstract: The Harry Potter series display such a complex set of plots with so many references to
history, legend and literature, with so many playfully arranged puns according to the names of
characters, creatures, items or places that one cannot easily decide where to begin with an
examination that may befit the extent of a seminar paper. The finally chosen scope of this
paper refers to my general interest in mythology and legend as well as to Rowling's admiring
aptitude to equip her characters from an extraordinary variety of backgrounds. Names are the
most obvious means of depicting literary characters and their intended personalities. Yet,
considering the multiplicity of those characters in the ever further developed seven novels,
further specification appears to be necessary to meet the demands of this paper. Therefore, its
focus is limited to character names and in that to several selected characters only, whose
names demonstrate mythological background most efficiently. To that effect, I am not
exclusively following a selective principle regarding the characters' significance in the books.
Surely enough, there are several major characters bearing names grounded on mythology, yet
Rowling placed so many according hints and links on minor characters and on figures not
even acting in the story(ies) themselves that it would seem a squandering of her labour to
concentrate on particular 'significant' characters only.
[...]
history, legend and literature, with so many playfully arranged puns according to the names of
characters, creatures, items or places that one cannot easily decide where to begin with an
examination that may befit the extent of a seminar paper. The finally chosen scope of this
paper refers to my general interest in mythology and legend as well as to Rowling's admiring
aptitude to equip her characters from an extraordinary variety of backgrounds. Names are the
most obvious means of depicting literary characters and their intended personalities. Yet,
considering the multiplicity of those characters in the ever further developed seven novels,
further specification appears to be necessary to meet the demands of this paper. Therefore, its
focus is limited to character names and in that to several selected characters only, whose
names demonstrate mythological background most efficiently. To that effect, I am not
exclusively following a selective principle regarding the characters' significance in the books.
Surely enough, there are several major characters bearing names grounded on mythology, yet
Rowling placed so many according hints and links on minor characters and on figures not
even acting in the story(ies) themselves that it would seem a squandering of her labour to
concentrate on particular 'significant' characters only.
[...]
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