Women s Ghost Literature in Nineteenth Century Britain

This book PDF is perfect for those who love Literary Criticism genre, written by Melissa Edmundson Makala and published by University of Wales Press which was released on 15 February 2013 with total hardcover pages 211. You could read this book directly on your devices with pdf, epub and kindle format, check detail and related Women s Ghost Literature in Nineteenth Century Britain books below.

Women s Ghost Literature in Nineteenth Century Britain
Author : Melissa Edmundson Makala
File Size : 48,7 Mb
Publisher : University of Wales Press
Language : English
Release Date : 15 February 2013
ISBN : 9780708326978
Pages : 211 pages
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Women s Ghost Literature in Nineteenth Century Britain by Melissa Edmundson Makala Book PDF Summary

Nineteenth-century ghost literature by women shows the Gothic becoming more experimental and subversive as its writers abandoned the stereotypical Gothic heroines of the past in order to create more realistic, middle-class characters (both living and dead, male and female) who rage against the limits imposed on them by the natural world. The ghosts of Female Gothic thereby become reflections of the social, sexual, economic and racial troubles of the living. Expanding the parameters of Female Gothic and moving it into the nineteenth and twentieth centuries allows us to recognise women’s ghost literature as a specific strain of the Female Gothic that began not with Ann Radcliffe, but with the Romantic Gothic ballads of women in the first decade of the nineteenth century.

Women s Ghost Literature in Nineteenth Century Britain

Nineteenth-century ghost literature by women shows the Gothic becoming more experimental and subversive as its writers abandoned the stereotypical Gothic heroines of the past in order to create more realistic, middle-class characters (both living and dead, male and female) who rage against the limits imposed on them by the natural

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Women s Ghost Literature in Nineteenth century Britain

"Throughout nineteenth-century Britain, female writers excelled within the genre of supernatural literature. Much of their short fiction and poetry uses ghosts as figures to symbolize the problems of gender, class, economics, and imperialism, thus making their supernatural literature something more than just a good scare. Women's Ghost Literature in Nineteenth-Century

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Women s Ghost Literature in Nineteenth Century Britain

Women's Ghost Literature in Nineteenth-Century Britain examines the Female Gothic genre and how it expanded to include not only gender concerns but also social critiques of repressed sexuality, economics and imperialism.

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The Perturbed Self

By comparison of late nineteenth-century ghost stories between China and Britain, this monograph traces the entangled dynamics between ghost story writing, history-making, and the moulding of a gendered self. Associated with times of anxiety, groups under marginalisation, and tensions with orthodox narratives, ghost stories from two distinguished literary traditions are

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The Perturbed Self

"By comparison of the late nineteenth-century ghost stories between China and Britain, this monograph traces the entangled dynamics between ghost story writing, history-making and the molding of a gendered self. Associated with times of anxiety, groups under marginalization and tensions with orthodox narratives, ghost stories from two distinguished literary traditions

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Avenging Angels  Ghost Stories by Victorian Women Writers

In this electrifying collection, Melissa Edmundson showcases ten authors who led lives that challenged Victorian notions of how women should behave and brought those transgressive ideas into their fiction.

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Women   s Colonial Gothic Writing  1850 1930

This book explores women writers’ involvement with the Gothic. The author sheds new light on women’s experience, a viewpoint that remains largely absent from male-authored Colonial Gothic works. The book investigates how women writers appropriated the Gothic genre—and its emphasis on fear, isolation, troubled identity, racial otherness, and

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The Haunted House in Women   s Ghost Stories

This book explores Victorian and modernist haunted houses in female-authored ghost stories as representations of the architectural uncanny. It reconsiders the gendering of the supernatural in terms of unease, denial, disorientation, confinement and claustrophobia within domestic space. Drawing on spatial theory by Gaston Bachelard, Henri Lefebvre and Elizabeth Grosz, it

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