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Animation, Adaptation, and the Plague
Andrew Dix and Sara Read
in
Adaptation
Adaptation, Volume 16, Issue 3, December 2023, Pages 406–426, https://doi.org/10.1093/adaptation/apad029
Published: 03 October 2023
... intimated in Defoe’s print-bound work; second, its gothic mode, hyperbolizing what is only one of a wide array of generic options followed in the Journal. The final section of the article extends the afterlives of both film and novel by considering them as fictions that, eerily, not only look...
Journal Article
“I have loved, O Lord, the beauty of thy house’: Magnificence and Catholic Architecture in Ireland, 1850–1900
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Niamh NicGhabhann
Journal of Victorian Culture, Volume 28, Issue 4, October 2023, Pages 605–612, https://doi.org/10.1093/jvcult/vcad002
Published: 31 March 2023
... role in spreading the Catholic faith around the world. Catholic Victorian ruins architecture Gothic Revival Devotional Revolution In 1866, the London Review magazine published a series of articles written by Wexford-born Congregational minister, writer and journalist James Godkin...
Journal Article
Making Strange: Teaching 19th-Century Gothic and Fantastic Literature
Alison Milbank
Literature and Theology, Volume 36, Issue 4, December 2022, Pages 397–406, https://doi.org/10.1093/litthe/frac031
Published: 27 January 2023
...Alison Milbank Abstract How can the teacher open what Charles Taylor describes as the ‘immanent frame’ of a secular self-sufficient view of reality? This article describes two modules studying non-realist literary modes—Gothic and fantasy writing—which seek to do this. God and the Gothic reverses...
Journal Article
Treatment of acute type A aortic dissection with the Ascyrus Medical Dissection Stent in a consecutive series of 57 cases
Maximilian Luehr and others
European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery, Volume 63, Issue 3, March 2023, ezac581, https://doi.org/10.1093/ejcts/ezac581
Published: 22 December 2022
... Dissection Stent Aortic surgery Stent collapse Stent flattening gothic arch Acute aortic dissection type A (AADA) remains one of the most dreadful clinical emergencies with rapidly increasing mortality until diagnosis and immediate surgical treatment [ 1 , 2 ]. Most often AADA extends from the proximal...
Journal Article
Remembering Hodson’s Horse: Commemoration and the Indian Uprising of 1857–58
Jim Cheshire
Journal of Victorian Culture, Volume 27, Issue 4, October 2022, Pages 577–594, https://doi.org/10.1093/jvcult/vcac068
Published: 25 September 2022
... wishing to perpetuate a conservative interpretation of Hodson’s career. Hodson’s horse William Hodson A. J. Beresford Hope George Edmund Street 1857 Indian Uprising Gothic Revival ecclesiology Muscular Christianity tomb chest sculpture imperialism William Hodson’s death six months after...
Journal Article
Ecumenism to Ontology: Stoker’s Theology of the Host
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Madeline Potter
Journal of Victorian Culture, Volume 27, Issue 3, July 2022, Pages 526–541, https://doi.org/10.1093/jvcult/vcac031
Published: 07 July 2022
... or Catholicism. Building on Alison Milbank’s argument in God and the Gothic, this essay shows how Stoker’s theology eschews the boundaries of rigid dogmatism, seeking instead an ecumenical and eccentric theology. It is through such theological exploration, I argue, that the novel discovers and frames...
Journal Article
Responsibility and Community: Narrating the Individual and the Collective in Pandemic Times
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Pamela K Gilbert
Journal of Victorian Culture, Volume 27, Issue 2, April 2022, Pages 283–291, https://doi.org/10.1093/jvcult/vcac013
Published: 13 April 2022
... lot of being human in a connected world. ‘We are not them’ – here the boundaries are now often being redrawn between Americans, and gothic narratives of the other abound (QAnon, etc.). To imagine a way past this requires not only the refusal of a traditional sense of liberal individualism...
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‘Going home when it was not home’: Jamais Vu in Nineteenth-Century British Fiction
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Sam Tett
Journal of Victorian Culture, Volume 27, Issue 3, July 2022, Pages 507–525, https://doi.org/10.1093/jvcult/vcac006
Published: 05 March 2022
... and popularity of the Victorian gothic, through which movement it exceeded its status as a mnemonic disturbance, re-emerging as a pervasive modern affect that we have inherited from the Victorians. jamais vu memory gothic haunted house affect nostalgia paramnesia déjà vu uncanny home Returning home from...
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‘The Eyes of an Intellectual Vampire’: Michael Field, Vernon Lee and Female Masculinities in Late Victorian Aestheticism
Frankie Dytor
Journal of Victorian Culture, Volume 26, Issue 4, October 2021, Pages 582–595, https://doi.org/10.1093/jvcult/vcab035
Published: 29 June 2021
...-variant Fields rejected Lee, Anstruther-Thomson and Cruttwell’s trans-masculinities as perversions of their sex. Female masculinity Aestheticism Gender variance Gothic Decadence Michael Field Vernon Lee Maud Cruttwell Clementina Anstruther-Thomson Arts and Humanities Research Council 10.13039...
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Gothic Secret Histories and Representing Australian Colonial Deaths at Sea: The Case of Captain Charles Wright Harris and the Wreck of the SS Admella (1859)
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Nicole Anae
Journal of Victorian Culture, Volume 25, Issue 4, October 2020, Pages 512–536, https://doi.org/10.1093/jvcult/vcz061
Published: 08 July 2020
... of the event preserved in the popular press and Admella poems, characterizes an alternative Victorian cultural memory, a gothic secret history concerning the wreck of the SS Admella and colonial deaths at sea. Admella colonial death gothic poetry Australia Captain Charles Wright Harris One...
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‘A New and Fierce Disorder’s Raging’: Monomania in Mary Barton (1848)
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Lindsey Stewart
Journal of Victorian Culture, Volume 24, Issue 4, October 2019, Pages 492–506, https://doi.org/10.1093/jvcult/vcy072
Published: 05 March 2019
... resembles her pretty Aunt, will not become a factory worker, Barton’s anxieties represent a commonly voiced concern about the consequences of women entering the world of organized labour. Linked explicitly with gothic notions of ‘haunting’ and a grimly ironic context of luxury and plenty, Barton’s sense...
Journal Article
The ‘Minster’ Jug as a ‘Pet’ Agent of Victorian Design Reform
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Rachel Gotlieb
Journal of Design History, Volume 32, Issue 2, May 2019, Pages 123–145, https://doi.org/10.1093/jdh/epy041
Published: 19 October 2018
.... Whether cherished or denigrated, Victorian relief-moulded jugs, such as that represented by the Knox ‘Minster’ jug, offer insights into Victorian design reform and curation and collecting from the nineteenth to the twenty-first centuries. ceramic Victorian design reform Gothic Revival jug In 2012...
Journal Article
Festive Reading and Seasonal Terrors: Hugh Conway’s Called Back (1883), Late Nineteenth-Century Gothic, and ‘Arrowsmith’s Christmas Annual’
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Paul Raphael Rooney
Journal of Victorian Culture, Volume 23, Issue 4, October 2018, Pages 556–569, https://doi.org/10.1093/jvcult/vcy055
Published: 28 August 2018
...Paul Raphael Rooney Christmas annual ghost story gothic sensation fiction periodical culture forgotten bestseller E-mail: [email protected] © 2018 Leeds Trinity University 2018 This article is published and distributed under the terms of the Oxford University Press, Standard...
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Authoring Monsters: Mary Shelley, Edgar Allan Poe and Early Nineteenth-Century Figures of Gothic Authorship
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Gero Guttzeit
Forum for Modern Language Studies, Volume 54, Issue 3, July 2018, Pages 279–292, https://doi.org/10.1093/fmls/cqy018
Published: 13 June 2018
... and distributed under the terms of the Oxford University Press, Standard Journals Publication Model ( https://dbpia.nl.go.kr/journals/pages/about_us/legal/notices ) Abstract This paper discusses early nineteenth-century authorship through an analysis of transgressive, double and fragmented monsters in Gothic...
Journal Article
Spooky Jane: Women, History, and Horror in Death Comes to Pemberley
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Camilla Nelson
in
Adaptation
Adaptation, Volume 9, Issue 3, 1 December 2016, Pages 377–392, https://doi.org/10.1093/adaptation/apw035
Published: 06 October 2016
..., based on P.D. James’ Death Comes to Pemberley, features a plot line transformed by the conventions of the neo-gothic thriller. Here, ghosts lurk in the Pemberley woods, lightning flashes across the sky, dark-haired ladies appear and disappear, and Fitzwilliam Darcy looks a lot more like...
Journal Article
Hoffmann's Die Elixiere des Teufels: The Double, the Death Drive, and the Apotropaic
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Jeremy Tambling
Forum for Modern Language Studies, Volume 51, Issue 4, October 2015, Pages 379–393, https://doi.org/10.1093/fmls/cqv057
Published: 13 October 2015
... the death drive the double repression Gothic novel fantasy apotropaic Alongside Pushkin , Gogol, Dostoevsky, Baudelaire, Walter Benjamin, and more controversially, Offenbach, Freud was one of Hoffmann's best readers. 1 Despite Carlyle's knowledge of Hoffmann and James...
Journal Article
How the Victorians Un-Invented Themselves: Architecture, the Battle of the Styles, and the History of the Term Victorian
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Kelly J. Mays
Journal of Victorian Culture, Volume 19, Issue 1, 1 March 2014, Pages 1–23, https://doi.org/10.1080/13555502.2014.889425
Published: 01 March 2014
... the specific, heated exchange that began in 1856 over plans for what would ultimately become the Foreign Office or the more general clash between defenders of Classic and Gothic architecture. Yet what we might style ‘the battles of style’ embraced at least three other conflicts as well – (1...
Journal Article
No Ordinary Skeleton: Unmasking the Secret Source of Gaston Leroux's Le Fantôme de l'Opéra
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Raj Shah
Forum for Modern Language Studies, Volume 50, Issue 1, January 2014, Pages 16–29, https://doi.org/10.1093/fmls/cqt048
Published: 18 December 2013
... Gothic. Leroux, Gaston Le Fantôme de l'Opéra genesis manuscript Phantom opera skeleton myth Persian Gothic Of course, the discovery that Leroux drew directly upon Roqueplan's anecdote immediately raises the question of the latter's veracity, which the remainder of this article examines...
Journal Article
Death at St Bernard's: Anti-vivisection, Medicine and the Gothic
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Keir Waddington
Journal of Victorian Culture, Volume 18, Issue 2, 1 June 2013, Pages 246–262, https://doi.org/10.1080/13555502.2013.778209
Published: 01 June 2013
...Keir Waddington © 2013 Leeds Trinity University College 2013 Abstract Displaying a Gothic fascination with the misapplication of science, Edward Berdoe's St Bernard's: The Romance of a Medical Student (1887) was one of a number of novels in the 1880s that repackaged the horrors...
Journal Article
Feminine Adolescence as Uncanny: Masculinity, Haunting and Self-Estrangement
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Deborah Martin
Forum for Modern Language Studies, Volume 49, Issue 2, April 2013, Pages 135–144, https://doi.org/10.1093/fmls/cqs067
Published: 01 February 2013
... of the presence of the adolescent girl in gothic and horror narratives. It argues that, within theories of femininity, girlhood emerges as a self-estranged, partial or divided subjectivity, which is haunted by oedipal masculinity. It discusses the idea that the girl's memory or experience of active desire...
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