| Acknowledgements | 第5-6页 |
| Abstract | 第6-7页 |
| 摘要 | 第8-10页 |
| Chapter One Introduction | 第10-19页 |
| 1.1 Introduction to Cynthia Ozick | 第10-11页 |
| 1.2 Literature Review | 第11-15页 |
| 1.3 Introduction to Foreign Bodies and The Ambassadors | 第15-16页 |
| 1.4 Introduction to the Theory of Intertextuality | 第16-19页 |
| Chapter Two A Story of the Jews:Rewriting James in Liturgical Literature | 第19-30页 |
| 2.1 Embracing Jewishness vs. Welcoming Civilization—Julian’s Reawakening vs. Chad’sRefinement | 第19-24页 |
| 2.2 Betrayal of Jewishness vs. Lack of Civilization—Marvin vs. Ms. Newsome | 第24-28页 |
| 2.3 All about Jews vs. All about Upper Class | 第28-30页 |
| Chapter Three: A Feminist Rewriting of The Ambassadors | 第30-39页 |
| 3.1 The Protagonists’ Journey of Self-Discovery — Her Own Woman vs. His OwnMan | 第31-34页 |
| 3.2 Breaking or Preserving the Authority —The New Woman vs. The Surrogate | 第34-36页 |
| 3.3 Redemption for Herself or Her Man —Self-Sacrifice vs. Self-Made Woman | 第36-39页 |
| Chapter Four Postmodern Rewriting of The Ambassadors | 第39-51页 |
| 4.1 Modernist Literature vs. Postmodern Literature | 第39-41页 |
| 4.2 Parody as a Form of Intertextuality | 第41-44页 |
| 4.3 Intertextuality in Narration — Postmodern Rewriting of James with EpistolaryNarration | 第44-47页 |
| 4.4 A World of“Foreign Bodies”— The Ambassadors in Postmodern Era | 第47-51页 |
| Chapter Five Conclusion | 第51-54页 |
| References | 第54-58页 |