Post-print version of article deposited following SHERPA guidelines.Late eighteenth-century science aimed to render the body transparent; in contrast, gothic novels of the same period often represented the body as an untrustworthy source of information about the self. In these novels, characters may often be reduced to a bodily or facial map, which may give clues as to personal character, motivation and intention. Yet the practice of reading the body — as practiced in sciences such as physiognomy, phrenology or criminology — also comes under intense interrogation. Through disastrous mis-readings, misdiagnoses and mis-identifications, gothic novelists demonstrate how conflating body and self is deeply threatening to ideas of ‘unique’ personh...
This thesis explores the cultural meanings attached to the visible appearance of the body and its p...
In this essay I concentrate on the discourse of sensibility in fiction and the discourse of the nerv...
This study explores the paradox that the delineation of mind, the dominant concern of the English an...
Post-print version of article deposited following SHERPA guidelines.Late eighteenth-century science ...
Late eighteenth-century medical science during the rise of the Gothic tradition stood on the brink o...
This work is a critical and historical exploration of some of the issues raised once it is posited t...
This dissertation presents a cultural historical analysis of the transparent human as a figure in Eu...
This study examines how ideas about the body in the late 19th century--how to see them better and ho...
The article examines M. Shelley’s «Frankenstein» as an example of the so-called second wave of Engli...
In early nineteenth-century Britain, Parliament decided that it must legislate on the problem of gra...
My dissertation explores the presence of physiognomy, which is the reading of faces and bodily affec...
The end of the nineteenth century witnessed a rise in popularity of Gothic fiction, which included t...
English men and women confronted many new questions about the relationship between identity and appe...
abstract: This research conceptualizes Gothic literature featuring undead characters produced and po...
The early modern period was an age of anatomical exploration and revelation, with new discoveries ca...
This thesis explores the cultural meanings attached to the visible appearance of the body and its p...
In this essay I concentrate on the discourse of sensibility in fiction and the discourse of the nerv...
This study explores the paradox that the delineation of mind, the dominant concern of the English an...
Post-print version of article deposited following SHERPA guidelines.Late eighteenth-century science ...
Late eighteenth-century medical science during the rise of the Gothic tradition stood on the brink o...
This work is a critical and historical exploration of some of the issues raised once it is posited t...
This dissertation presents a cultural historical analysis of the transparent human as a figure in Eu...
This study examines how ideas about the body in the late 19th century--how to see them better and ho...
The article examines M. Shelley’s «Frankenstein» as an example of the so-called second wave of Engli...
In early nineteenth-century Britain, Parliament decided that it must legislate on the problem of gra...
My dissertation explores the presence of physiognomy, which is the reading of faces and bodily affec...
The end of the nineteenth century witnessed a rise in popularity of Gothic fiction, which included t...
English men and women confronted many new questions about the relationship between identity and appe...
abstract: This research conceptualizes Gothic literature featuring undead characters produced and po...
The early modern period was an age of anatomical exploration and revelation, with new discoveries ca...
This thesis explores the cultural meanings attached to the visible appearance of the body and its p...
In this essay I concentrate on the discourse of sensibility in fiction and the discourse of the nerv...
This study explores the paradox that the delineation of mind, the dominant concern of the English an...