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      Book

      The Gothic World
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      Book

      The Gothic World

      DOI link for The Gothic World

      The Gothic World book

      The Gothic World

      DOI link for The Gothic World

      The Gothic World book

      Edited ByGlennis Byron, Dale Townshend
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2013
      eBook Published 27 September 2013
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203490013
      Pages 580
      eBook ISBN 9780203490013
      Subjects Language & Literature
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      Byron, G., & Townshend, D. (Eds.). (2013). The Gothic World (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203490013

      ABSTRACT

      The Gothic World offers an overview of this popular field whilst also extending critical debate in exciting new directions such as film, politics, fashion, architecture, fine art and cyberculture. Structured around the principles of time, space and practice, and including a detailed general introduction, the five sections look at:

      • Gothic Histories
      • Gothic Spaces
      • Gothic Readers and Writers
      • Gothic Spectacle
      • Contemporary Impulses.

      The Gothic World seeks to account for the Gothic as a multi-faceted, multi-dimensional force, as a style, an aesthetic experience and a mode of cultural expression that traverses genres, forms, media, disciplines and national boundaries and creates, indeed, its own ‘World’.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      part I|81 pages

      Gothic Histories

      chapter 1|12 pages

      The Politics of Gothic Historiography, 1660–1800

      BySean Silver

      chapter 2|12 pages

      Gothic Antiquarianism in the Eighteenth Century

      ByRosemary Sweet

      chapter 3|11 pages

      Gothic and the New American Republic, 1770–1800

      ByJeffrey Andrew Weinstock

      chapter 4|13 pages

      Gothic and the Celtic Fringe, 1750–1850

      ByJames Kelly

      chapter 5|11 pages

      British Gothic Nationhood, 1760–1830

      ByJustin D. Edwards

      chapter 6|10 pages

      Gothic Colonies, 1850–1920

      ByRoger Luckhurst

      chapter 7|10 pages

      History, Trauma And The Gothic in Contemporary Western Fictions

      ByJerrold E. Hogle

      part II|73 pages

      Gothic Spaces

      chapter 8|13 pages

      Gothic and the Architectural Imagination, 1740–1840

      ByNicole Reynolds

      chapter 9|12 pages

      Gothic Geography, 1760–1830

      ByBenjamin A. Brabon

      chapter 10|11 pages

      Gothic and the Victorian Home

      ByTamara Wagner

      chapter 11|11 pages

      American Gothic and the Environment, 1800—Present

      ByMatthew Wynn Sivils

      chapter 12|11 pages

      Gothic Cities and Suburbs, 1880—Present

      BySara Wasson

      chapter 13|13 pages

      Gothic in Cyberspace

      ByBryan Alexander

      part III|164 pages

      Gothic Readers and Writers

      chapter 14|13 pages

      Gothic and the Publishing World, 1780–1820

      ByAnthony Mandal

      chapter 15|13 pages

      Gothic and the History of Reading, 1764–1830

      ByKatie Halsey

      chapter 16|14 pages

      Gothic Adaptation, 1764–1830

      ByDiane Long Hoeveler

      chapter 17|11 pages

      Gothic Romance, 1760–1830

      BySue Chaplin

      chapter 18|11 pages

      Gothic Poetry, 1700–1900

      ByDavid Punter

      chapter 19|10 pages

      Gothic Translation France, 1760–1830

      ByAngela Wright

      chapter 20|12 pages

      Gothic Translation Germany, 1760–1830

      ByBarry Murnane

      chapter 21|11 pages

      Gothic and the Child Reader, 1764–1850

      ByM.O. Grenby

      chapter 22|10 pages

      Gothic and the Child Reader, 1850—Present

      ByChloe Buckley

      chapter 23|10 pages

      Gothic Sensations, 1850–1880

      ByFranz J. Potter

      chapter 24|10 pages

      Young Adults and the Contemporary Gothic

      ByHannah Priest

      chapter 25|13 pages

      The Earliest Parodies of Gothic Literature

      ByDouglass H. Thomson

      chapter 26|11 pages

      Figuring the Author in Modern Gothic Writing

      ByNeil McRobert

      chapter 27|13 pages

      Gothic and the Question of Theory, 1900-Present

      ByScott Brewster

      part IV|105 pages

      Gothic Spectacle

      chapter 28|18 pages

      Gothic and Eighteenth-Century Visual Art

      ByMartin Myrone

      chapter 29|13 pages

      Gothic Visuality in the Nineteenth Century

      ByElizabeth McCarthy

      chapter 30|12 pages

      Gothic Theater, 1765-Present

      ByDiego Saglia

      chapter 31|10 pages

      Ghosts, Monsters and Spirits, 1840–1900

      ByAlexandra Warwick

      chapter 32|12 pages

      Gothic Horror Film from The Haunted Castle (1896) to Psycho (1960)

      ByJames Morgart

      chapter 33|11 pages

      Gothic Horror Film, 1960—Present

      ByXavier Aldana Reyes

      chapter 34|13 pages

      Southeast Asian Gothic Cinema

      ByColette Balmain

      chapter 35|14 pages

      Defining a Gothic Aesthetic in Modern and Contemporary Visual Art

      ByGilda Williams

      part V|83 pages

      Contemporary Impulses

      chapter 36|12 pages

      Sonic Gothic

      ByIsabella van Elferen

      chapter 37|13 pages

      Gothic Lifestyle

      ByCatherine Spooner

      chapter 38|11 pages

      Gothic and Survival Horror Videogames

      ByEwan Kirkland

      chapter 39|11 pages

      Rewriting the Canon in Contemporary Gothic

      ByJoanne Watkiss

      chapter 40|11 pages

      Gothic Tourism

      ByEmma McEvoy

      chapter 41|11 pages

      Gothic on the Small Screen

      ByBrigid Cherry

      chapter 42|12 pages

      Post-Millennial Monsters

      Monstrosity-no-more
      ByFred Botting
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