Romance Novels and Possibilities in Life : Analyzing Ethical Aspects in Happiness and Happy Place

Author
Degree
Masters thesis
University
University of Helsinki
Publication year
2024
Comment

Here's the abstract:

This thesis examines two contemporary romances novels through the framework of
hermeneutic narrative ethics. Danielle Steel’s Happiness (2023) and Emily Henry’s Happy
Place (2023) are both recent contemporary romance novels by popular authors. They are
genre-typical and provide heteronormative and relatively uncomplicated romance narratives
targeted to the masses.

Hanna Meretoja’s framework of hermeneutic narrative ethics (2018) allows for the
examination and comparison of the ethical aspects of the two narratives. The model identifies
six aspects of storytelling that both enable and diminish the sense of the possible.
Hermeneutic narrative ethics’ focus on the interpretative structure of narratives and
experiences facilitates the examination of how cultural narrative webs and our own prior
experiences influence the new and how the new also has the ability to alter what is already
known. It is possible, then, to analyze what effect (literary) narratives can have by placing
them on a continuum from narratives that perpetuate harmful stereotypes to those that provide
alternative perspectives.

To examine the sense of the possible opened and diminished in contemporary romance
novels, this thesis utilizes Pamela Regis’ eight essential narrative elements of romance novels.
By focusing on different themes found in these narrative elements, this thesis examines
whether Steel’s and Henry’s novels encourage ethical exploration or perpetuate society’s
harmful master-narratives.

This thesis shows that the two novels contain narratives that both enable and diminish the
sense of the possible. I argue that while these novels contain both diminishing and enabling
features throughout, counter-narratives are offered more often before the conflict that keeps
the couple apart begins to unravel. After this point, the narratives turn to perpetuate harmful
master-narratives more often. By utilizing Meretoja’s model, this thesis examines these
ethically challenging narratives, reveals underlying mechanisms of power, and adds to the
growing feminist research done on the romance novel genre.
 

---