![]() ![]() ![]() Psychoanalytic approach.įrank, Frederick S. Uses theories of the uncanny to discuss the monstrous doubling in Frankenstein and Grendel. ![]() "Monstrous Image: Theory of Fantasy Antagonists." Genre 13 (1980): 441-53. General survey arranged by author and by subject.įoust, R.E. The Gothic's Gothic: Study Aids to the Tradition of the Tale of Terror. "The Madhouse, the Whorehouse, and the Convent." Partisan Review 44 (1977): 268-78.ĭescribes madhouse, whorehouse and convent as largely equivalent structures that represent a metaphoric reigning in of unreason and human desire.įisher, Benjamin Franklin. "On 'Metaphysical Prisons.'" Durham University Journal 32 (1971): 133-8.ĭiscusses literal and figurative imprisonment as recurrent themes in art and literature. "Form and Ideology in the Gothic Novel." Essays in Literature 18 (1991): 151-65.Ī materialist critique that uses Althusser and Foucault to read the Gothic novels as reproducing an ultimately conservative an anti-individualist ideology.īlondel, Jacques. supernatural and psychological frameworks) in 19th Century Gothic fiction.īernstein, Stephen. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1992.Ī study of the beautiful and deadly female fiend (esp. Our Ladies of Darkness: Feminine Daemonology in Male Gothic Fiction. Selected Books on the Gothic: Annotated BibliographyĪdapted from the Graduate Program at the University of VirginiaĪndriano, Joseph. ![]()
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