Preview

In What Ways Does Rebecca Demonstrate and Subvert the Conventions of the Romantic Genre?”

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1141 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
In What Ways Does Rebecca Demonstrate and Subvert the Conventions of the Romantic Genre?”
“In what ways does Rebecca demonstrate and subvert the conventions of the romantic genre?”

In Rebecca du Maurier appears to conform to the conventions of the romantic genre however, du Maurier has also subverted the genre of romance through her representation of the relationship between the narrator and Maxim and the structure of the novel. She has also incorporated of elements of the gothic genre and the psychological thriller.

On the surface Rebecca appears to demonstrate the conventions of the romantic genre. The storyline includes a heroine, who is thinks herself to be very plain “with straight, bobbed hair and youthful, unpowdered face, dressed in an ill-fitting coat and skirt…”, as well as a hero, who the heroine believes is “arresting, sensitive and medieval in some strange inexplicable way” as well as dark and mysterious. One convention of the romantic genre used in Rebecca is the exotic location at which they meet, Monte Carlo, and where Maxim asks her to “come home to Manderly” with him. Like in many other romance novels there is someone who tries to break up the ‘happy couple’ as well as the ‘other woman’ however in Rebecca these are two different people. Mrs Van Hopper thinks the narrator is “making a big mistake” by marrying Maxim but does not try and stop the wedding as she thinks it will not work out anyway. In a very romantic genre-like style Maxim ‘saves’ the narrator from Mrs Van Hopper. The narrator doesn’t listen to what Mrs Van Hopper says because she has found a “new confidence” and starts to fantasize about herself and Maxim “planning the future”, sitting “together in the dining room” and being able to “talk … about being happy”. Another convention of the romance genre is the ‘other woman’ who in Rebecca is the late Mrs de Winter. The narrator believes that Rebecca represents the love of Maxim’s life. When she finds the note that Rebecca had written in a book for Maxim, she decides to burn it and when she does, the narrator feels “the

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Abigail Williams from the play, The Crucible, is a vicious antagonist .She would stop at nothing to attain her demented goals. In another writer’s hands, Abby could have been portrayed in a sympathetic light. After all, she is under age and has been sleeping with a supposedly honorable man thirteen years her senior. Arthur Miller, however, finds little humanity within her. Throughout the play, Proctor labels her a “harlot” and a “whore.” And perhaps Miller isn’t far off. According to the playwright’s research, the real Abigail Williams turned to prostitution several years after the Salem Witch Trials. Her deviousness almost makes her unrealistic. She convinces young women to dance in the dark forest (a sinful act by puritan standards). She practices voodoo in an attempt to win back her lover, John Proctor. She feigns demonic possession, luring the rest of the girls to behave the same way. She plants evidence of witchcraft in Elizabeth Proctor’s home, hoping to send her to the gallows. She manipulates the judges and denies having a relationship with Proctor. Perhaps the most sinister act takes place after a dozen citizens have been hanged. Abigail steals Rev. Parris’ life savings and runs away, never to be heard from again .In short, Miss Williams is a wretched, diabolic person! Abigail is the exact opposite of Elizabeth. Abigail represents the repressed desires — sexual and material — that all of the Puritans possess. The difference is that Abigail does not suppress her desires. She finds herself attracted to Proctor while working in the Proctor home. Abigail is independent, believing that nothing is impossible or beyond her grasp. These admirable qualities often lead to creativity and a thirst for life; however, Abigail lacks a conscience to keep herself in check. As a result, she sees no folly in her affair with Proctor. In fact, Abigail resents Elizabeth because she prevents Abigail from being with Proctor. Declaring witchcraft provides her with instant status…

    • 380 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Rebecca's Revival Summary

    • 1085 Words
    • 5 Pages

    From a life of slavery to a life of mission, Rebecca’s Revival follows a Caribbean woman of the island of St. Thomas during the eighteenth century. From conversion to evangelism, slavery to freedom, and marriage to missionary, Rebecca’s extraordinary journey is described by Jon Sensbach with a thoughtful, encompassing and thorough approach. Sensbach also utilizes such historical sources as reports and letters, travel diaries and meeting minutes, to a varied collection of historical and primary sources. Structurally, Sensbach leaves the reader with little in the way of speculation as he organizes his bibliographical entry by both source and place. He also factually presents the surprising, and heretical, views of the Moravian religion and their…

    • 1085 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Margot’s relationship with her husband, Raleigh, mirrors Franny’s relationship with her boyfriend, Lane: distant not-exactly lovers, “prestigious” males that don’t understand their partners. When Raleigh…

    • 500 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Rebecca Research Paper

    • 1517 Words
    • 7 Pages

    As the plot moves on the story begins in Monte Carlo. The narrator lives the life of an assistant to the nasty Mrs. Van Hoper. Mrs. Van Hoper has her companion jumping through hoops to help her find out the latest gossip. The narrator says, “Like a juggler’s assistant I produced the props, then silent and attentive I waited on my cue.” (duMaurier 13) The narrator despised working for the domineering Mrs. Van Hoper but, she had no choice. After all hope was lost, she had got closer acquainted to the Mr. de Winter. After a couple days in Monte Carlo Maxim asked for the narrators hand in marriage and took her away to Manderley. This is just the start of…

    • 1517 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The reader’s first encounter with a female character is ‘The woman in Weed.’ She is presented as a liar and exaggerator due to her reaction when Lennie tugged her dress. George and Lennie are forced to flee from Weed, in order to escape the newly formed mob chasing them. This forces the reader to perceive women in a diminishing way at the start, which influences the reader’s perception on women overall, throughout the novel.…

    • 1773 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    In George Sand’s Marianne, Sand uses her development of the three primary characters to bring together two unlikely soul mates, and at the same time separate the two most likely paired of the three figures. Her primary characters, Marianne, Pierre, and Philippe, and their make-up play an intricate role in the story. More than just playing a key role though, their make-up leads the story in a direction that is propelled by the unique personalities each hold. The drive that each strong personality contributes to Sand’s Marianne, and their unique temperaments, brings the reader into a different sort of love story as opposed to what would be expected of a typical love story. Sand, with her characters, leads the story to a place where however unlikely it winds up, it couldn’t possibly have ended any other way than it does.…

    • 958 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the beginning of Daphne du Maurier’s novel Rebecca, we are told that Maxim’s first wife Rebecca de Winter died from drowning. Moreover, everyone including the second Mrs. de Winter was not only convinced that Rebecca was a kind and warm woman but also that Maxim and Rebecca were very much in love. However, as the story continues it is revealed not only how kind Rebecca really was, but how she died, and how happy Maxim and Rebecca really were. To elaborate, for the majority of the novel everyone believed that Rebecca de Winter drowned due to a boating accident. However, towards the end of the novel it is unveiled that Rebecca’s death was not caused by a boating accident; she was actually shot dead by her husband Maxim.…

    • 676 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Daphne Du Maurier’s, ‘Rebecca’ was published in 1938 in an era of modernist experimentation in literature. The novel possesses a remarkable degree of psychological sophistication, while still delivering a brand of suspense. The narrator of the story, a naïve young woman, marries Maxim De Winter and they return to his country home, Manderley, in Cornwall, which plays a significant underlying role in the action of the narrative. The opening chapter foreshadows how Rebecca’s death is still a strong presence, which is an underlying theme throughout the whole novel.…

    • 425 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    1. In Jeanine Basinger’s ”The Genre”, she describes 3 purposes. The third of which outlines the role of providing a temporary release from normality for the viewer. Mildred Pierce is a direct example of this purpose because it shows the choice that a female character has to make. There is a choice that Mildred makes when she decides to pursue a financially secure future, which breaks the mold from that love is a woman’s job and nothing else (Basinger, 19). Mildred challenges tradition and in this case provide a temporary release of a potentially redundant story line.…

    • 762 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Ann-Marie MacDonald's Goodnight Desdemona (Good Morning Juliet), the audience is swept into the playful subconscious of the protagonist, Constance Ledbelly. Before she speaks, her imaginative nature is introduced by way of Act I, The Prologue. The chorus enters giving an intriguing monologue in which the first stages of an exciting transformation begin to unfold. The Prologue is so useful in that it gives indications of plot, theme, conflict and so on. All of which carry a heavy dramatic significance. However, Ann-Marie Macdonald suggests that the biggest use of The Prologue is in developing the character of Constance.…

    • 631 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, the antagonist, Abigail Williams, makes it blatantly obvious to the reader that she will fill the role of villain in the play. Abigail shows no sign of remorse for her actions throughout the entire story which makes her seem downright diabolical. She is so full of revenge against Elizabeth, and lust for John Proctor that it seems as if nothing could stop her manipulation of the entire town. However, Miller gives the reader reason to believe that there might be deeper motivations behind Abigail’s insanity, but does this make her actions justifiable?…

    • 649 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Kate Chopin’s creation of the frail hearted Mrs. Mallard enlightens through irony and twists, about the servitude and acceptance of fate women in the nineteenth century faced regarding marriage. A life of independence outside of the constraints of marriage was a fantasy for women like Mrs. Mallard. When she is finally offered the opportunity and it was taken away from her abruptly, it leads to her literal heartbreak. Mrs. Mallard’s death showcased her unwillingness to return to her life of limitation that she’d been longing to escape, the irony of her broken heart, the exemplification of the lifestyle of women of the era, as well as the bittersweet undertone of marriage.…

    • 1279 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Another acclaimed author, Harper Lee, uses Romantic facets in her book, To Kill a Mockingbird. The novel is filled with emotion and the loss of innocence, but Lee also uses nature. Lee uses an analogy combined with nature to demonstrate the loss of innocence when Atticus expresses to Scout “remember, it is a sin to kill a mockingbird” (“Harper Lee Quote”). The novel also uses emotion with the conviction of an innocent man, Tom Robinson, and the outcast, Boo Radley. The supernatural, like in some Romantic poetry, is found in the novel by the portrayal of Boo Radley as a ghost.…

    • 101 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Julie And Kilee Analysis

    • 890 Words
    • 4 Pages

    She wants to marry a guy who will with her forever but it is kinda hard to do that because she can’t really find her Mr. Right as they say. She just wants to have a fairytale wedding with a guy that she is madly in love with. Julie is the protagonist of this novel because she is the one that is mostly facing the problem on wanting a man.…

    • 890 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    vanity fair review

    • 648 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The story begins with the Rebecca Sharp appearance, Rebecca is a classic “bad girl” – bohemian parents, no money, no connections – who is perfectly willing to use intelligence, wit, charm, and sex to find wealth and climb in society. She came from a family of poverty, her mother is dancer and father is alcoholic . On gratuation, Rebecca started independent life with a governess at for family in the small town. Rebecca takes a position as governess at Queen’s Crawley and married Rawdon Crawley, second son of Sir Pitt Crawley. Because of his marriage, Rwadon’s rich aunt disinherits him. Suddenly , Mrs. Crawley ( Rawdon 's mother ) died. After that, Mr. Pitt was express a wish to married Rebecca. But she refused on the grounds that she was married and that's the son Rawdon .…

    • 648 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays