The woman as survivor : the evolution of the female figure in the works of Heinrich Böll

Author(s)

    • Moeller, Aleidine Kramer

Bibliographic Information

The woman as survivor : the evolution of the female figure in the works of Heinrich Böll

Aleidine Kramer Moeller

(American university studies, ser. 1 . Germanic languages and literature ; v. 85)

P. Lang, c1991

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [151]-165) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book is a comprehensive examination of the development of the female figure in Heinrich Boell's fiction. The woman moved from the periphery in his early works to the central role, marked by important changes in her nature. Boell's ideal woman refuses to compromise her individual sense of morality. Even in a materialistic society she alone is able to survive with her innocence and Naechstenliebe intact. A significant part of this study focuses upon the numerous parallels that exist between Catharism, a heresy which prevailed in the Middle Ages, and the philosophy Boell embraces in his later works. These insights offer a new interpretive perspective into Boell's works, and in particular his women figures.

Table of Contents

Contents: A study of the development of the female figure in Boell's fiction. An analysis of biblical and religious parallels associated with women in Boell's fiction.The focus on the numerous parallels that exist between Catharism and Boell's later works.

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