Using two examples of literary monsters, the Creature in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818), and Grendel’s Mother in Beowulf, this thesis demonstrates the bearing fictional identities have on “real” bodies, through an examination of two further literary texts, David Henry Hwang’s play, M. Butterfly (1986) and J. M. Coetzee’s novel, Disgrace (1999). Western definitions of Being have historically divided body and mind, favouring the mind as formative of subjective experience and denigrating the body as secondary and impure. This thesis demonstrates that this mind/body binary is symptomatic of the masculine ontological imperative to disown the body and its effects on Being, simultaneously ridding itself of the feminine it believes is its irrat...
In the thesis I would like to investigate otherness, particularly with reference to female sexuality...
Although Mary Shelley invented her chimerical creature in Frankenstein over 200 years ago, the Being...
This thesis posits British and American Gothic as a construction of, and critical engagement with, ...
Using two examples of literary monsters, the Creature in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818), and Gre...
This article proposes a new theoretical category, the “monstrative,” which is used both as a way to ...
This thesis considers the relationship between representations of the Frankenstein’s Monster on film...
In this project, I explore cultural representations of aberrant embodiment, society’s monsters, to a...
The aim of Monsters Within and Without: Reading Female Identity Through Monstrosity in Andrzej Żuław...
There is a long history of exploring Frankenstein through a feminist lens. A historical examination ...
This thesis explores the idea of the “monstrous-feminine,” or the idea that female monsters of telev...
This article explores how Mary Shelley's Frankenstein engages with notions relating to mens rea. It ...
In his essay “Monster Culture (Seven Theses),” Jeffrey J. Cohen defines and deconstructs textual mon...
This paper explores Mary Shelley's Frankenstein as a text that deconstructs the binaries of identity...
The purpose of this thesis was to explore the ways a fragmented identity can be reconciled through e...
In this essay, we return to the queer potential of the monstrous and extend it to the 'invisibi...
In the thesis I would like to investigate otherness, particularly with reference to female sexuality...
Although Mary Shelley invented her chimerical creature in Frankenstein over 200 years ago, the Being...
This thesis posits British and American Gothic as a construction of, and critical engagement with, ...
Using two examples of literary monsters, the Creature in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818), and Gre...
This article proposes a new theoretical category, the “monstrative,” which is used both as a way to ...
This thesis considers the relationship between representations of the Frankenstein’s Monster on film...
In this project, I explore cultural representations of aberrant embodiment, society’s monsters, to a...
The aim of Monsters Within and Without: Reading Female Identity Through Monstrosity in Andrzej Żuław...
There is a long history of exploring Frankenstein through a feminist lens. A historical examination ...
This thesis explores the idea of the “monstrous-feminine,” or the idea that female monsters of telev...
This article explores how Mary Shelley's Frankenstein engages with notions relating to mens rea. It ...
In his essay “Monster Culture (Seven Theses),” Jeffrey J. Cohen defines and deconstructs textual mon...
This paper explores Mary Shelley's Frankenstein as a text that deconstructs the binaries of identity...
The purpose of this thesis was to explore the ways a fragmented identity can be reconciled through e...
In this essay, we return to the queer potential of the monstrous and extend it to the 'invisibi...
In the thesis I would like to investigate otherness, particularly with reference to female sexuality...
Although Mary Shelley invented her chimerical creature in Frankenstein over 200 years ago, the Being...
This thesis posits British and American Gothic as a construction of, and critical engagement with, ...