This paper explores the idea that the creation of the monsters’ existence at the hands of Gothic authors, such as Mary Shelley, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Brahm Stoker, serves as fictionalized examples of the inquiry of currere (or “ficto-currere” [McDermott, 2019]), and the exploration of “possibility.” Mary Shelley, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Bram Stoker’s social and personal life experiences have evidently influenced their writings. This auto-ethnographic element of their stories, this self-examination and incorporation of their life experiences, becomes their currere. Through this lens of currere, their stories can tell us a lot about controversial topics that were too taboo to straightforwardly address during the 1800s, when they wer...
This MA thesis studies the significance of the nineteenth-century British literary tradition of Goth...
This study explores the paradox that the delineation of mind, the dominant concern of the English an...
The Gothic notion of villainy is both necessary and significant, making it very complex and elusive....
Since ancient times, monsters have populated the human mind and, along with us, they have evolved...
The introduction of the supernatural into literary discourse, together with an emphasis on insanity,...
Gothic fiction is a versatile genre which emerged in the eighteenth-century England, and has since l...
Scholarly studies have established that the eighteenth and nineteenth-century English novel mixed co...
This dissertation explores representations of monsters and the monstrous in nineteenth-century Briti...
abstract: This research conceptualizes Gothic literature featuring undead characters produced and po...
From its eighteenth-century literary origins to its twenty-first-century cultural manifestations, Go...
This research paper explores the evolution of the Gothic tradition in Victorian literature. The pape...
It is convenient to dismiss the gothic villains within as invasive and is a threat that the dominant...
The rhetoric of fear is a complex notion that incorporates the theory of the fantastic narrative as ...
This thesis examines how certain Gothic fictions of the nineteenth century draw upon and critique ph...
Representations of monstrosity in literature reveal the cultural tensions of specific historical per...
This MA thesis studies the significance of the nineteenth-century British literary tradition of Goth...
This study explores the paradox that the delineation of mind, the dominant concern of the English an...
The Gothic notion of villainy is both necessary and significant, making it very complex and elusive....
Since ancient times, monsters have populated the human mind and, along with us, they have evolved...
The introduction of the supernatural into literary discourse, together with an emphasis on insanity,...
Gothic fiction is a versatile genre which emerged in the eighteenth-century England, and has since l...
Scholarly studies have established that the eighteenth and nineteenth-century English novel mixed co...
This dissertation explores representations of monsters and the monstrous in nineteenth-century Briti...
abstract: This research conceptualizes Gothic literature featuring undead characters produced and po...
From its eighteenth-century literary origins to its twenty-first-century cultural manifestations, Go...
This research paper explores the evolution of the Gothic tradition in Victorian literature. The pape...
It is convenient to dismiss the gothic villains within as invasive and is a threat that the dominant...
The rhetoric of fear is a complex notion that incorporates the theory of the fantastic narrative as ...
This thesis examines how certain Gothic fictions of the nineteenth century draw upon and critique ph...
Representations of monstrosity in literature reveal the cultural tensions of specific historical per...
This MA thesis studies the significance of the nineteenth-century British literary tradition of Goth...
This study explores the paradox that the delineation of mind, the dominant concern of the English an...
The Gothic notion of villainy is both necessary and significant, making it very complex and elusive....