![]() ![]() She will then be compared with the narrator in connection with the following four topics: deception, barrenness, handicap, and the replacement of a previous powerful female presence. ![]() The biblical Rebecca will first – and briefly – be compared, or, rather, primarily contrasted with du Maurier's Rebecca. A comparison between the biblical Rebecca and the narrator, who, to a certain extent, can be viewed as a second Rachel, shows several interesting parallels and differences. de Winter), not only – and naturally – assumes the name, she begins to act like the late Rebecca and even considers that she has taken her place beside Maxim. de Winter are compared, the latter appears to be the complete reverse of the second Matriarch. ![]() When the biblical Rebecca and the first Mrs. Wake by Rebecca Hall (ebook) Wake The Hidden History of Women-Led Slave Revolts Rebecca Hall, Click to preview A must-read graphic history. Although the central female protagonist and the narrator in Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca is not called Rebecca, which is the name of Maxim de Winter's late wife, the name Rebecca permeates the entire novel. ![]()
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