Racist politics and white moral superiority are persistently parodied and subverted in Oates’s recent Gothic novel, The Accursed. The novel turns back to early twentieth century Princeton, an elite society struggling under the “Crosswicks Curse,” and reconsiders history through the Gothic lens to critique the discriminatory ideology of America’s classic Religious Right. Appropriately, this paper isolates the recurring problematic of racism in the novel first to demonstrate how through the creation of the “other,” racist politics and white moral superiority were rationalized by the powerful, and second to recognize how national leaders obsessed with ideas of purity lead double lives engendering a duality that emerges from their warped interp...
During the Progressive Era, American realist and naturalist writers frequently employed the gothic m...
Review of Joyce Carol Oates\u27s novel The Sacrifice focusing on how racial politics in America can ...
This essay explores the relationship between race and ideal democratic citizenship in Joyce Carol Oa...
In this chapter, McLennan argues that in Joyce Carol Oates’s baffling, enormous novel The Accursed (...
This article discusses the ways in which the gentleman characters in Joyce Carol Oates’s novels The ...
This dissertation presents a thematic analysis of Joyce Carol Oates’s (1938) novels written since 19...
The present study examines the normative and repressive cultural discourses on beauty and femininity...
grantor: University of TorontoThis study revisits the American gothic through an examinati...
Revisiting the American Gothic via Julia Kristeva\u27s theory of the abject demonstrates how Gothi...
A review of Joyce Carol Oates\u27s novel A Book of American Martyrs considering her fiction\u27s dia...
Joyce Carol Oates is undoubtedly one of the contemporary writers in the American literature who writ...
This thesis explores the conventions of both historical and Gothic fiction in order to investigate w...
This article begins with the assertion that now more than ever, in the aftermath of Ferguson and in ...
The horror novel appears in the late twentieth century as a significant genre of popular fiction. Gr...
For a long time, traditional critics read Edgar Allan Poe as an aesthete unconcerned with history an...
During the Progressive Era, American realist and naturalist writers frequently employed the gothic m...
Review of Joyce Carol Oates\u27s novel The Sacrifice focusing on how racial politics in America can ...
This essay explores the relationship between race and ideal democratic citizenship in Joyce Carol Oa...
In this chapter, McLennan argues that in Joyce Carol Oates’s baffling, enormous novel The Accursed (...
This article discusses the ways in which the gentleman characters in Joyce Carol Oates’s novels The ...
This dissertation presents a thematic analysis of Joyce Carol Oates’s (1938) novels written since 19...
The present study examines the normative and repressive cultural discourses on beauty and femininity...
grantor: University of TorontoThis study revisits the American gothic through an examinati...
Revisiting the American Gothic via Julia Kristeva\u27s theory of the abject demonstrates how Gothi...
A review of Joyce Carol Oates\u27s novel A Book of American Martyrs considering her fiction\u27s dia...
Joyce Carol Oates is undoubtedly one of the contemporary writers in the American literature who writ...
This thesis explores the conventions of both historical and Gothic fiction in order to investigate w...
This article begins with the assertion that now more than ever, in the aftermath of Ferguson and in ...
The horror novel appears in the late twentieth century as a significant genre of popular fiction. Gr...
For a long time, traditional critics read Edgar Allan Poe as an aesthete unconcerned with history an...
During the Progressive Era, American realist and naturalist writers frequently employed the gothic m...
Review of Joyce Carol Oates\u27s novel The Sacrifice focusing on how racial politics in America can ...
This essay explores the relationship between race and ideal democratic citizenship in Joyce Carol Oa...