Physical Collection
Digital Collection
Database / E-Book
Feedback
Collection Recommendation
Satisfaction survey
Please take a moment to complete this survey below
Library's collection
Library's IT development
Cancel
The Ways the four pevensie siblings help aslan in c.s lewis' the chronicles of Narnia: the lion, the witch and the wardrobe
-
Creator(s)
(11403051) SARAH FRANCISCA K
Contributor(s)
Liliek Soelistyo → Advisor 1
Sarah Limuil → Examination Committee 1
Publisher
Universitas Kristen Petra; 2009
Language
English
Category
s1 – Undergraduate Thesis
Sub Category
Skripsi/Undergraduate Thesis
Source
Undergraduate Thesis No. 01011849/ING/2009; Sarah Fransisca Koesbianto (11403051)
Subject(s)
ENGLISH FICTION-20TH CENTURY-STUDY AND TEACHING
LEWIS, C.S, 1898-1963. THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA : THE LION, THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE -STUDY AND TEACHING
File(s)
jiunkpe-ns-s1-2009-11403051-11562-cs_lewis-cover.pdf
jiunkpe-ns-s1-2009-11403051-11562-cs_lewis-abstract_toc.pdf
jiunkpe-ns-s1-2009-11403051-11562-cs_lewis-chapter1.pdf
jiunkpe-ns-s1-2009-11403051-11562-cs_lewis-chapter2.pdf
jiunkpe-ns-s1-2009-11403051-11562-cs_lewis-chapter3.pdf
jiunkpe-ns-s1-2009-11403051-11562-cs_lewis-conclusion.pdf
jiunkpe-ns-s1-2009-11403051-11562-cs_lewis-references.pdf
jiunkpe-ns-s1-2009-11403051-11562-cs_lewis-appendices.pdf
Similar Collection
by creator, contributor, or subject
A Study on irony of situation in some of Hardy's poems as seen through the characters
The Factors that make Kochan become a homosexual in Yukio Mishima's confessions of a mask
A Study on the main character's process of character development in E.M. Forster's howard end
A Study of Jenny Bunn's development which leads to her changing of principle of life in Amis's Take A Girl Like ...
The Idea of sin and salvation as revealed through the main characters in Graham Greene's Brighton Rock
The Idea of egoist hedonism in Aldous Huxley's those Barren Leaves
A Study of Liza's wrong decision and its fatal effects in W. Somerset Maugham's Liza of Lambeth
A strudy of Jim's Psychological problems in Joseph Conrad's Lord Jim