Various texts theorize the wanton woman and the conditions that created her but none so much as Leslie Fiedler's Love and Death in the American Novel. His book speaks to a particularly American wanton, monstrous woman because, as Fiedler states quite accurately, the very roots of America are a result of our relationship with the other and with fear. The puritans feared God, Satan, Indians, and women. Over time, the United States has encountered myriad others to fear as well. As a result of this fear, says Fiedler, American literature is, at its heart, gothic literature. More importantly, this fear is demonstrated through a lack of mature love relations in American plotlines and in authors' characterizations of women. Fiedler is absolutely c...
As British women writers in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries sought to define how ...
Nineteenth-century women writers commonly use themes of entrapment and madness in what are now class...
This thesis explores the relationship between the Female Gothic novel of the late eighteenth and ear...
Traditionally, the gothic genre has been identified as a formula fiction worthy of little serious st...
UnrestrictedThe gothic genre has always been tied to empire-building, flourishing, as it does, in tw...
My dissertation takes a new approach to the study of the American gothic, focusing on the rhetorical...
The Salem witch trials, and the many narratives based on them, both contemporaneous and subsequent d...
The Midwest has been an absent center of literary studies for as long as people have passed it over ...
Leslie Fiedler observes in his Love and Death in the American Novel: "The final horrors, as modern s...
During the Progressive Era, American realist and naturalist writers frequently employed the gothic m...
The gothic of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries inherits and exemplifies the cultural division...
Revisiting the American Gothic via Julia Kristeva\u27s theory of the abject demonstrates how Gothi...
Scholarly studies have established that the eighteenth and nineteenth-century English novel mixed co...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis analyzes the novels of Margaret Atwood through t...
This dissertation demonstrates that a study of nineteenth-century Gothic fiction can broaden our und...
As British women writers in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries sought to define how ...
Nineteenth-century women writers commonly use themes of entrapment and madness in what are now class...
This thesis explores the relationship between the Female Gothic novel of the late eighteenth and ear...
Traditionally, the gothic genre has been identified as a formula fiction worthy of little serious st...
UnrestrictedThe gothic genre has always been tied to empire-building, flourishing, as it does, in tw...
My dissertation takes a new approach to the study of the American gothic, focusing on the rhetorical...
The Salem witch trials, and the many narratives based on them, both contemporaneous and subsequent d...
The Midwest has been an absent center of literary studies for as long as people have passed it over ...
Leslie Fiedler observes in his Love and Death in the American Novel: "The final horrors, as modern s...
During the Progressive Era, American realist and naturalist writers frequently employed the gothic m...
The gothic of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries inherits and exemplifies the cultural division...
Revisiting the American Gothic via Julia Kristeva\u27s theory of the abject demonstrates how Gothi...
Scholarly studies have established that the eighteenth and nineteenth-century English novel mixed co...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis analyzes the novels of Margaret Atwood through t...
This dissertation demonstrates that a study of nineteenth-century Gothic fiction can broaden our und...
As British women writers in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries sought to define how ...
Nineteenth-century women writers commonly use themes of entrapment and madness in what are now class...
This thesis explores the relationship between the Female Gothic novel of the late eighteenth and ear...