The term "Product(s)" shall designate perfumery and cosmetic products of the LOLITA LEMPICKA brand offered for sale on the Site. "Parties" means alternatively or collectively LOLITA LEMPICKA and/or the Customer(s). "LOLITA LEMPICKA" refers to LESLIE LEONOR INTERNATIONAL SAS, with a capital of €1,000,000, registered in the Paris Trade and Companies Register under number 329 034 300, whose registered office is located at 42, avenue Montaigne - 75008 PARIS - France.Į-mail : Terms and Conditions of Sale" refers to the present general terms and conditions of sale of Products on the Site. "Customer(s)" refers to the Internet user(s) browsing the Site and making an online purchase of Product(s) for personal use. Mon petit Alcohol free 80ml and wooden rattle Mon petit Alcohol free 80ml and bunny plush Vertigo, like Lolita, sets the heroine Madeleine as the Romantic myth, and then subverts it by destroying the hero Scottie’s fantasy.Lolita Lempicka Le Parfum – Flacon Minuit Madeleine and Judy resemble the romantic image Portrait of Carlotta and are posited in the sublime position. I also analyze the similar way of using the Romantic myth in Alfred Hitchcock’s film Vertigo. Through works of installing and subverting the Romantic myth, Lolita assures the functioning of the Romantic myth and introduces a degraded version of the Romantic myth in contemporary culture. Parody, in Lolita, is utilized in a dialectical way, and works as a device to demystify the Romantic myth that has been installed, without really canceling it. As a narrative device, Lolita follows Poe’s myth-making to establish the Romantic myth and engage readers. The narrator Humbert borrows Poe’s Annabel Lee as the prototype of a sublime figure and endows mythic and sublime nature to his portrayal of Lolita. I focus on its connection with Edgar Allen Poe’s works. Title Lolita: Installing and Subverting the Romantic Myth Other Titles 롤리타: 낭만주의 신화의 설치와 전복 Author Kim Hye Ri Alternative Author(s) 김혜리 Advisor(s) Yoo Jae Eun Issue Date 2018-02 Publisher 한양대학교 Degree Master Abstract This thesis examines Vladimir Nabokov’s novel Lolita’s dialectical use of the Romantic myth.
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