The female gothic as a genre, with its emergence in the 19th century, has a history of critiquing women’s place in the domestic sphere by showcasing the horrors of the home. When The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson was first published in 1959, it did so with both this historical genre background, as well as with a resurgence of traditional gender roles as an ideal. With the help of this context, this paper will do a queer reading of Jackson’s novel, highlighting the main character Eleanor’s queer longing for her friend Theodora. It will furthermore take into consideration Eleanor’s gender and the restrictions put on it during the time, especially concerning heteronormativity. To closer examine the relation between Eleanor and her ...
The research conducted in this paper will concern the development of the Gothic trope of hauntings i...
This thesis project is titled “Becoming Oriented: Queering Bodies and Space in Shirley Jackson’s The...
This dissertation analyzes Hill House from two perspectives. In the first part, it focuses on the ar...
In her classic horror novel The Haunting of Hill House, Shirley Jackson appropriates Shakespearean r...
This revisiting of ‘The Haunting of Hill House’ will draw on the psychoanalytical concepts of repres...
This paper argues that Shirley Jackson uses the physical form generally and architectural features i...
This thesis explores the relationship between the Female Gothic novel of the late eighteenth and ear...
In her day, Shirley Jackson was known as the author of both haunting supernatural tales and anecdota...
This thesis investigates the recurrence of haunted houses in nineteenth, twentieth and twenty-first-...
In this study, the author seeks to dispel the fallacious notion that Shirley Jackson\u27s 1959 novel...
abstract: A mother’s treatment toward her child has a direct influence on the happiness, companionsh...
This paper deals with the portrayal and role of the haunted house in Gothic literature, specifically...
This thesis studies the male gaze as it is portrayed in Shirley Jackson’s We Have Always Lived in th...
In this paper, I explore the relationship between gothic and horror novels and their film adaptation...
Mary Wilkins Freeman and Shirley Jackson, though writing in different time periods, are both investe...
The research conducted in this paper will concern the development of the Gothic trope of hauntings i...
This thesis project is titled “Becoming Oriented: Queering Bodies and Space in Shirley Jackson’s The...
This dissertation analyzes Hill House from two perspectives. In the first part, it focuses on the ar...
In her classic horror novel The Haunting of Hill House, Shirley Jackson appropriates Shakespearean r...
This revisiting of ‘The Haunting of Hill House’ will draw on the psychoanalytical concepts of repres...
This paper argues that Shirley Jackson uses the physical form generally and architectural features i...
This thesis explores the relationship between the Female Gothic novel of the late eighteenth and ear...
In her day, Shirley Jackson was known as the author of both haunting supernatural tales and anecdota...
This thesis investigates the recurrence of haunted houses in nineteenth, twentieth and twenty-first-...
In this study, the author seeks to dispel the fallacious notion that Shirley Jackson\u27s 1959 novel...
abstract: A mother’s treatment toward her child has a direct influence on the happiness, companionsh...
This paper deals with the portrayal and role of the haunted house in Gothic literature, specifically...
This thesis studies the male gaze as it is portrayed in Shirley Jackson’s We Have Always Lived in th...
In this paper, I explore the relationship between gothic and horror novels and their film adaptation...
Mary Wilkins Freeman and Shirley Jackson, though writing in different time periods, are both investe...
The research conducted in this paper will concern the development of the Gothic trope of hauntings i...
This thesis project is titled “Becoming Oriented: Queering Bodies and Space in Shirley Jackson’s The...
This dissertation analyzes Hill House from two perspectives. In the first part, it focuses on the ar...