As one of the most adapted literary works of all time, filmmakers throughout the twentieth century have tried to answer one inexplicable question in Robert Louis Stevenson's Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde: Why does Mr. Hyde "weep like a woman?" While the novel appears to exclude a female presence, Mr. Hyde's rebellious nature symbolizes the feminists who Victorian men believed threatened the very balance of fin de siècle English society: the New Women. These feminists sought personal liberties, including sexuality, and shook the definition of gender roles and domesticity in the nineteenth century. The New Woman's actions were negatively and heavily scrutinized by men writers and she continues to appear as a complex phenomenon thro...
If horror is a medium for exploring political, social, and personal anxieties, it is no surprise tha...
Dramatised depictions of female-on-male rape, in inverting the conventional gendered rape binary of ...
Horror as a genre holds a unique place in pop culture as a space in which to explore our fears in wa...
Horror has long been understood as a ‘bad object’ in relation to its audiences. More specifically, t...
“The Hyde Effect: A Commentary on Nineteenth-Century British Anxieties and the Literature Borne from...
Decades of horror film research and theorizations have shown us that there is a reason why this part...
“Spectacular Flesh: Erotic Horror as Feminist Praxis in Women’s Literature & Film” asks, “What h...
Alfred Hitchcock, the master of the horror film, has been accused by many film critics and theorists...
Representations of monstrosity in literature reveal the cultural tensions of specific historical per...
This thesis has used a Queer approach in an attempt to explore that double as a literary element is...
Cave ab homine unius libri, as the Latin epigram warns us: beware the author of one book. Frankens...
This essay is a feminist analysis of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus (1818) t...
Horror films, like any cultural product, are a result of their time and place in the world. The trad...
Questions of gender and genre in Frankenstein remain complex issues for contemporary critics, in the...
When Mary Shelley referred to her first novel, Frankenstein, as my hideous progeny, she could not ...
If horror is a medium for exploring political, social, and personal anxieties, it is no surprise tha...
Dramatised depictions of female-on-male rape, in inverting the conventional gendered rape binary of ...
Horror as a genre holds a unique place in pop culture as a space in which to explore our fears in wa...
Horror has long been understood as a ‘bad object’ in relation to its audiences. More specifically, t...
“The Hyde Effect: A Commentary on Nineteenth-Century British Anxieties and the Literature Borne from...
Decades of horror film research and theorizations have shown us that there is a reason why this part...
“Spectacular Flesh: Erotic Horror as Feminist Praxis in Women’s Literature & Film” asks, “What h...
Alfred Hitchcock, the master of the horror film, has been accused by many film critics and theorists...
Representations of monstrosity in literature reveal the cultural tensions of specific historical per...
This thesis has used a Queer approach in an attempt to explore that double as a literary element is...
Cave ab homine unius libri, as the Latin epigram warns us: beware the author of one book. Frankens...
This essay is a feminist analysis of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus (1818) t...
Horror films, like any cultural product, are a result of their time and place in the world. The trad...
Questions of gender and genre in Frankenstein remain complex issues for contemporary critics, in the...
When Mary Shelley referred to her first novel, Frankenstein, as my hideous progeny, she could not ...
If horror is a medium for exploring political, social, and personal anxieties, it is no surprise tha...
Dramatised depictions of female-on-male rape, in inverting the conventional gendered rape binary of ...
Horror as a genre holds a unique place in pop culture as a space in which to explore our fears in wa...