Bernice M. Murphy, popular literature lecturer at Dublin’s Trinity College, opens her wide-ranging survey of The Rural Gothic in American Popular Culture with a telling remark: “it is no coincidence that when American authors and film-makers fantasise about the end of civilisation as they know it, they so often produce narratives which unconsciously evoke the beginnings of European settlement”(2). Indeed, a body of scholarship in gothic fiction (Fiedler, Goddu, Lloyd-Smith) concurs in tracing..
Ireland is not a country unfamiliar with trauma. It is an island widely known for its history with V...
First paragraph: In the United States, the words ‘contemporary’ and ‘gothic’...
Dickinson wrote this enigmatic, single-sentence letter without commentary, but while she did not ela...
Bernice M. Murphy, popular literature lecturer at Dublin’s Trinity College, opens her wide-ranging s...
Bernice M. Murphy, popular literature lecturer at Dublin’s Trinity College, opens her wide-ranging s...
Bernice M. Murphy, The Suburban Gothic in American Popular Culture. Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrav...
The Midwest has been an absent center of literary studies for as long as people have passed it over ...
Bernice M. Murphy and Stephen Matterson, eds., Twenty-First-Century Popular Fiction Edinburgh: Edin...
UnrestrictedThe gothic genre has always been tied to empire-building, flourishing, as it does, in tw...
Derived from the work of Bernice M. Murphy, Suburban Gothic is a subgenre in popular culture provi...
This study explores the role of the Southern mountain tradition and the Gothic mode in William Faulk...
In a recent article on the eeriness of the English countryside, Robert Macfarlane juxtaposes an offi...
Traditionally, naturalism and the Gothic have been seen as genres that have little to do with one an...
In The Haunting of Hill House, Shirley Jackson interplays repression and fear inside a “normal” worl...
Rural living in America conjures up images of traditional families based on agrarian industry in the...
Ireland is not a country unfamiliar with trauma. It is an island widely known for its history with V...
First paragraph: In the United States, the words ‘contemporary’ and ‘gothic’...
Dickinson wrote this enigmatic, single-sentence letter without commentary, but while she did not ela...
Bernice M. Murphy, popular literature lecturer at Dublin’s Trinity College, opens her wide-ranging s...
Bernice M. Murphy, popular literature lecturer at Dublin’s Trinity College, opens her wide-ranging s...
Bernice M. Murphy, The Suburban Gothic in American Popular Culture. Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrav...
The Midwest has been an absent center of literary studies for as long as people have passed it over ...
Bernice M. Murphy and Stephen Matterson, eds., Twenty-First-Century Popular Fiction Edinburgh: Edin...
UnrestrictedThe gothic genre has always been tied to empire-building, flourishing, as it does, in tw...
Derived from the work of Bernice M. Murphy, Suburban Gothic is a subgenre in popular culture provi...
This study explores the role of the Southern mountain tradition and the Gothic mode in William Faulk...
In a recent article on the eeriness of the English countryside, Robert Macfarlane juxtaposes an offi...
Traditionally, naturalism and the Gothic have been seen as genres that have little to do with one an...
In The Haunting of Hill House, Shirley Jackson interplays repression and fear inside a “normal” worl...
Rural living in America conjures up images of traditional families based on agrarian industry in the...
Ireland is not a country unfamiliar with trauma. It is an island widely known for its history with V...
First paragraph: In the United States, the words ‘contemporary’ and ‘gothic’...
Dickinson wrote this enigmatic, single-sentence letter without commentary, but while she did not ela...