Fr. 130.00

Ghostly and the Ghosted in Literature and Film - Spectral Identities

Inglese · Copertina rigida

Spedizione di solito entro 1 a 3 settimane (non disponibile a breve termine)

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Informationen zum Autor Edited by Lisa B. Kröger and Melanie Anderson Klappentext The Ghostly and the Ghosted in Literature and Film: Spectral Identities reads a variety of texts, from the Gothic novels of late eighteenth-century England to modern Asian horror films, arguing that, as different as these stories are, the theme beneath the hauntings is the same. The essays in this collection all develop the concept of social ghosting and explore what it means to be ghostly while alive, marginalized at the edges of community and society. Inhaltsverzeichnis IntroductionPart One: The Gothic and the Ghostly Chapter One: Haunted Narratives: Women Writing the Ghostly in Early Gothic Fiction Lisa KrögerChapter Two: City of Ghosts: Elizabeth Bowen's Wartime StoriesStefania PorcelliChapter Three: Those "whose deaths were not remarked:" Ghostly Other Women in Henry James's The Turn of the Screw, Charlotte Perkins Gilman's The Yellow Wallpaper, and Marilynne Robinson's HousekeepingJana M. TigchelaarPart Two: Spectral Figures and Spectral HistoriesChapter Four: These Ghosts Will Be Lovers: The "Cultural Haunting" of Class Consciousness in Ian McEwan's AtonementKarley K. AdneyChapter Five: The Spectral Queerness of White Supremacy in Helen Oyeyemi's White Is for WitchingAmy K. KingChapter Six: In the Spirit of Reconciliation: Migrating Spirits and Australian Postcolonial Multiculturalism in Hoa Pham's VixenJessica CarnielChapter Seven: Haunting Mothers: Alternative Modes of Communication in Geographies of Home and SoledadBetsy A. SandlinPart Three: Spectral ProjectionsChapter Eight: Aesthetics of Hauntings as Diasporic Sensibility in Julie Dash's Daughters of the DustYu-yen LiuChapter Nine: Women as Cultural Wound: Korean Horror Cinema and the Imperative of HanAndrew Hock Soon NgChapter Ten: Interrogating Capitalism, The Specter of Hiroshima, and the Architectural Uncanny in Kiyoshi Kurosawa's PulsePaul PetrovicBibliographyAbout the Contributors...

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