Analysis of the Body in Clive Barker's Splatterpunk Fiction
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Teaching Speculative Fiction in College: a Pedagogy for Making English Studies Relevant
Georgia State University ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University English Dissertations Department of English Summer 8-7-2012 Teaching Speculative Fiction in College: A Pedagogy for Making English Studies Relevant James H. Shimkus Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/english_diss Recommended Citation Shimkus, James H., "Teaching Speculative Fiction in College: A Pedagogy for Making English Studies Relevant." Dissertation, Georgia State University, 2012. https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/english_diss/95 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Department of English at ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University. It has been accepted for inclusion in English Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. TEACHING SPECULATIVE FICTION IN COLLEGE: A PEDAGOGY FOR MAKING ENGLISH STUDIES RELEVANT by JAMES HAMMOND SHIMKUS Under the Direction of Dr. Elizabeth Burmester ABSTRACT Speculative fiction (science fiction, fantasy, and horror) has steadily gained popularity both in culture and as a subject for study in college. While many helpful resources on teaching a particular genre or teaching particular texts within a genre exist, college teachers who have not previously taught science fiction, fantasy, or horror will benefit from a broader pedagogical overview of speculative fiction, and that is what this resource provides. Teachers who have previously taught speculative fiction may also benefit from the selection of alternative texts presented here. This resource includes an argument for the consideration of more speculative fiction in college English classes, whether in composition, literature, or creative writing, as well as overviews of the main theoretical discussions and definitions of each genre. -
A Structuralist Approach to Understanding the Fiction of HP Lovecraft
University of Rhode Island DigitalCommons@URI Open Access Dissertations 1992 Out of the Shadows: A Structuralist Approach to Understanding the Fiction of H. P. Lovecraft James A. Anderson University of Rhode Island Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/oa_diss Recommended Citation Anderson, James A., "Out of the Shadows: A Structuralist Approach to Understanding the Fiction of H. P. Lovecraft" (1992). Open Access Dissertations. Paper 696. https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/oa_diss/696 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@URI. It has been accepted for inclusion in Open Access Dissertations by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@URI. For more information, please contact [email protected]. OUT OF THE SHADOWS: A STRUCTURALIST APPROACH TO UNDERSTANDING THE FICTION OF H.P. LOVECRAFT BY JAMES A. ANDERSON A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN ENGLISH UNIVERSITY OF RHODE ISLAND 1992 Abstract Although Howard Phillips Lovecraft (1890-1937) is generally regarded as one of the world's finest writers of horror and science fiction, his work has received little critical attention by mainstream critics. This study takes Lovecraft out of the shadows of literature by shedding light upon his work through a structural analysis of fifteen of his stories. This analysis shows that Lovecraft's fiction, while it may appear fantastic, expresses early twentieth century naturalism in a cosmic context. Part One subjects four of Lovecraft's best known stories to a detailed structural analysis using the theories of Roland Barthes and Gerard Genette to isolate Lovecraft's major themes and narrative techniques. -
Iywm Schedule
GUEST/PRESENTER BIOGRAPHIES PANELS AND EVENTS Amy Acosta is an acquisition and production editor at Entangled Publishing. She is interested in diversity-rich YA, NA, and Adult fiction in the genres of Contemporary Romance, Historical (Regency/Victorian), Fantasy, and Science Fiction. One of her main goals is to help LGBTQIA+ and POC voices become mainstream and bring diversity into the publishing world. Amy lives in Puerto Rico with three very bossy rescue cats, and she ardently believes that love has no boundaries, that representation matters, and that spaceships are very cool. Find her on Twitter @AmarilysWrites Editor/pitches Linda D. Addison is an award-winning author of five collections, including How To Recognize A Demon Has Become Your Friend, and the first African- American recipient of the HWA Bram Stoker Award®. She is a recipient of the HWA Lifetime Achievement Award, HWA Mentor of the Year and SFPA Grand Master. Addison has published over 360 poems, stories and articles and is a member of CITH, HWA, SFWA and SFPA. She is a co-editor of Sycorax’s Daughters, an anthology of horror fiction/poetry by African-American women. Catch her work in Black Panther: Tales of Wakanda, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction (May/June), Weird Tales Magazine #364 and Don’t Turn Out the Lights. Women Writing Dark Fantasy and Horror 7/10 6PM, Carla E. Anderton is Editor-in-Chief of Mon Valley Vistas, an online publication that covers the arts, entertainment, education, lifestyle, health and wellness, and other areas of interest in the Mon Valley and surrounding areas, with a particular focus on people of color, people with disabilities, and members of the LGBTQ+ community. -
1. Introduction from the French Fantastique, To
1 1. Introduction From the French Fantastique, to weird fiction and Giallo cinema, directors and authors like Dario Argento and H.P. Lovecraft have managed to shock and terrify their audiences for generations with their unique styles, codes and conventions utilized in their works, and their examination of the subgenres they work in. This essay takes a look at how I pay homage to these great forerunners of horror, from the writing style I chose to adopt, as well as the structure of the novel and the perspective from which one reads it. It shall also investigate various mythologies I draw inspiration from, and the subgenres in which I work in and the how I invert certain conventions and aspects found again and again in literature and cinema of this kind to suit the context of my novel. Our Immaculate deals with an extra-terrestrial threat lurking under an old all-girls school in the Magaliesburg. 2. About The novel takes place over a period of twenty-four hours. Electra Almacy, a Matric pupil who used to be head girl at the school, is the protagonist of the story. She is restless, hates the teaching staff (in particular the ruthless principal Doctor Hamilton) and yearns to start living her life outside of the school and dreams of exploring the world. One night, after going to detention, she and a friend are attacked by another Matric pupil and they are forced to hide in a tunnel underneath the school. While in the tunnel, Electra passes out and wakes up in a room with nine other girls. -
ARTICLE Self-Made Monsters: Agency, Monstros- Ity, and Queerness in Poppy Z
Studies in Gothic Fiction • Volume 6 Issue 1 • 2018 © 30 ARTICLE Self-Made Monsters: Agency, Monstros- ity, and Queerness in Poppy Z. Brite’s Gothic Horror by Evan Hayles Gledhill Article DOI: https://doi.org/10.18573/sgf.17 Copyright Evan Hayles Gledhill 2018 Date Accepted: 1 May 2018 ISSN: 2156-2407 This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Studies in Gothic Fiction • Volume 6 Issue 1 • 2018 © 31 Articles Self-Made Monsters: Agency, Monstrosity, and Queerness in Poppy Z. Brite’s Gothic Horror Article DOI: https://doi.org/10.18573/sgf.17 Evan Hayles Gledhill Abstract Poppy Z. Brite’s gothic horror fiction is chiefly populated by the odd, the excluded, the queer. This article explores the relation- ships between queerness, normativity, and the body in Brite’s gothic fictions through Adrienne Rich’s concept of “compulsory heterosexuality” and Robert McRure and Alison Kafer’s extensions of this analysis into “compulsory ablebodiedness.”1 In Brite’s gothic tales queerness is often aligned with physical anomaly - both naturally occurring such as albinism, and preternatural such as a vampires’ fangs. Those most likely to come to harm, or cause harm, are those who seek to enforce their standards upon oth- ers, perhaps to normalize the abnormal body, or demand access to a queer space. Brite not only acknowledges the social dynamics identified by McRuer and Kafer, but also celebrates their potential. The monster is not a monster because of what they are, but because of what they do and how they do it, and often because of what has been done to them. -
Unsettling Chapters: 31 Days of Dread
UNSETTLING CHAPTERS: 31 DAYS OF DREAD by VINCE DARCANGELO Unsettling Chapters: 31 Days of Dread and “Literary Subversions” copyright 2012 Vince Darcangelo originally appeared in Ensuing Chapters, 2012 Human Torpedo Press Transgress Magazine Unsettling Chapters: 31 Days of Dread Intro: Literary Subversions 1 Oct. 1: Edgar Allan Poe 3 Oct. 2: Irvine Welsh: Marabou Stork Nightmares 6 Oct. 3: Paul Auster: Man in the Dark 8 Oct. 4: Poppy Z. Brite 10 Oct. 5: Mo Hayder: Birdman 13 Oct. 6: Tim Lebbon: Fears Unnamed 15 Oct. 7: Institutionalization 18 Oct. 8: Ryu Murakami: Piercing 23 Oct. 9: Chuck Palahniuk: Invisible Monsters 26 Oct. 10: Christopher Moore: A Dirty Job 28 Oct. 11: Ian McEwan 30 Oct. 12: Joyce Carol Oates: Haunted 33 Oct. 13: Jennifer Egan: The Keep 35 Oct. 14: Vladimir Nabakov: Lolita 37 Oct. 15: Alice Blanchard: Darkness Peering 39 Oct. 16: Stephen King: Night Shift 41 Oct. 17: Iain Banks: The Wasp Factory 43 Oct. 18: Mary Stewart Atwell: “Maynard” 45 Oct. 19: H.P. Lovecraft 47 Oct. 20: Stephen Dobyns: The Church of Dead Girls 50 Oct. 21: Michael Chabon: “In the Black Mill” 52 Oct. 22: Madness 55 Oct. 23: Pseudopod 60 Oct. 24: Ray Bradbury 62 Oct. 25: José Saramago: All the Names 68 Oct. 26: Mark Z. Danielewski: House of Leaves 71 Oct. 27: Fyodor Dostoyevsky: Notes From Underground 74 Oct. 28: Stephen King: Apocalypse 76 Oct. 29: Neil Gaiman: “A Study in Emerald” 79 Oct. 30: Albert Camus: The Fall 81 Oct. 31: Joyce Carol Oates: “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?” 84 Literary Subversions By Vince Darcangelo This past October, Ensuing Chapters, the book blog of Transgress Magazine, embarked on a Halloween-themed series of blog posts, Unsettling Chapters: 31 Days of Dread. -
Splatterpunk: El Hijo Rebelde Del Padre Gótico
241 Splatterpunk: el hijo rebelde del padre Gótico David Hidalgo Ramos Universidad Complutense de Madrid Resumen El splatterpunk, subgénero que aquí se trata, surgió en los años ochenta del siglo XX. Un grupo de autores jóvenes comenzaron a desarrollar una nueva estética de horror extremo principal- mente en literatura, aunque existen manifestaciones artísticas en otros campos. Su intención era la de mostrar una nueva mi- rada del mundo, expresar mediante crueles metáforas de sexo, violencia y evisceraciones, la nueva visión de la realidad con la que pretendían despertar a una sociedad dormida y pasiva. El movimiento, de una clara ideología transgresora, recibe nume- rosas influencias, encontrando una de las más fuertes en el góti- co, rebelándose a su padre literario y reformulando a su tiempo algunos de los principales temas y motivos del movimiento de- cimonónico. “El trasfondo de la cultura [posmoderna] lo constituyen la sangre, la tortura, la muerte y el horror�” F� Jameson (El posmodernismo o la lógica cultural del capitalismo avanzado) I. David J. Schow: el hacedor de nombres Aunque ya empezó a gestarse en la década de los setenta del siglo XX, el movimiento literario del splatterpunk se asentó oficialmen- te en mitad de los ochenta, cuando David J� Schow1 propuso la 1. Escritor, crítico y guionista; obra suya es el guión de El cuervo (1994). Christopher Fulbright Tales of Obscenity (2013) 242 243 nomenclatura del subgénero siguiendo toda una tradición de mo- El splatterpunk, que oficialmente recibía una fuerte influencia del mundo vimientos de ideología transgresora como el cyberpunk� La nueva del cine —entre el gore de los años 60 y-70 y la Serie B de los 804—, estética, recién bautizada, planteaba una reformulación de los posee un árbol genealógico mucho más ancestral, al menos en el ámbito temas productores de terror clásicos pero desde una perspectiva literario� Todos los motivos que esta tendencia transgresora expone, los mucho más explícita. -
Horror Subgenres (Definitions and Examples
Horror Subgenres (Courtesy: http://www.cuebon.com/ewriters/Hsubgenres.html) (Definitions and Examples - All) As it tends to distort our familiar reality, horror is a slippery genre to define. Disturbing themes such as possible insanity and unsought penetration suffuse these tales. In its harsher forms, these stories and depictions are deliberately shocking and controversial. Aliens infuse this subgenre with relentless troublemaking. Overlapping with 'science fiction,' the source of terror is another planet, whose inhabitants are encountered there, or travel to our Earth, if not both. The "Alien" franchise (featuring Sigourney Weaver) leads this charge. Scott Sigler's novel Infected is a recent example, among many. In M. Night Shyamalan's movie Signs, mysterious rural visitors are revealed to be (somewhat improbable) aliens. Creepy Kids horror is defined by its name. Horror mavens have said that children are mysterious strangers coming into the world--and this subgenre takes that unspoken worry and runs with it. Stephen King's short story and film Children of the Corn are straightforward examples. Many others, such as Richard Donner's film The Omen, involve a child who is directly related to Satan. Cross Genre is a subgenre whose horror tales have almost-overriding elements of another major genre. For example, Joe Lansdale writes 'horror' in 'western' settings, while his novel The Drive-In ensnares rural rednecks. Frank Peretti's novel The Oath contains strong 'horror' elements, portrayed as 'the wages of sin' in an envangelical Christian context. Cutting Edge refers to horror that consciously goes against the grain, and is probably without many of the genre's familiar tropes and/or styles. -
S67-00076-N185-1991-03.Pdf
SFRA Newsletter, 185, March 1991 In This Issue: President's Message (Lowentrout) ............................................................. 3 22nd Annual SFRA Conference Update (Bogle) .....•..•.••.....•....•..•....•.•.....• .4 February Executive Meeting Minutes (Mead) ............................................ 5 Shape of Films to Come (Krulik) ................................................................ 8 Miscellany (Barron) •.....••.•...•.•......••.••.•.•••..•...•............................••...•....•.•.• 9 Letter to Editor (Slusser & Mallett) ........................................................... 12 Editorial (Harfst) ...................................................................................... 13 REVIEWS: Non-Fiction: Beckwith, Lovecraft's Providence & Adjacent Parts (Moore) ................... 14 Behrends, Clark Ashton Smith (Sanders) ..........•..•.........•.....•..................• 15 Card, How to Write Science Fiction and Fantasy (5. Smith) ......•.•........... 15 Coren, Gilbert: the Man Who Was G. K. Chesterton (B. Collins) .......••... 16 Corman & Jerome, How I Made a Hundred Movies (Klossner) ...•..•........ 18 Elliot, Jack Dann: Annotated Bibliography (Reuben) ......•...•....•......•.......• 20 Elliot & Reginald, The Work of George Zebrowski The Work of Pamela Sargent (Bartter) •...•..•.................. 20 Ellison, Harlan Ellison Hornbook ........ ,Sleepless Nights in the Procrustean Bed, Clark, ed. (Wolfe) ......... 21 Frank, Through the Pale Door: Guide to American Gothic (Morrison) .•.....•...•..•...........•............. -
Analysis of the Body in Clive Barker's Splatterpunk Fiction
The Transformation of the Self: Analysis of the Body in Clive Barker’s Splatterpunk Fiction Štefek, Antonija Master's thesis / Diplomski rad 2019 Degree Grantor / Ustanova koja je dodijelila akademski / stručni stupanj: University of Zadar / Sveučilište u Zadru Permanent link / Trajna poveznica: https://urn.nsk.hr/urn:nbn:hr:162:824527 Rights / Prava: In copyright Download date / Datum preuzimanja: 2021-10-01 Repository / Repozitorij: University of Zadar Institutional Repository of evaluation works Sveučilište u Zadru Odjel za anglistiku Diplomski sveučilišni studij engleskog jezika i književnosti: nastavnički smjer (dvopredmetni) Antonija Štefek The Transformation of the Self: Analysis of the Body in Clive Barker’s Splatterpunk Fiction Diplomski rad Zadar, 2019. Sveučilište u Zadru Odjel za anglistiku Diplomski sveučilišni studij engleskog jezika i književnosti; nastavnički smjer (dvopredmetni) The Transformation of the Self: Analysis of the Body in Clive Barker’s Splatterpunk Fiction Diplomski rad Student/ica: Mentor/ica: Antonija Štefek Izv. prof. dr. sc. Marko Lukić Zadar, 2019. Izjava o akademskoj čestitosti Ja, Antonija Štefek, ovime izjavljujem da je moj diplomski rad pod naslovom The Transformation of the Self: Analysis of the Body in Clive Barker’s Splatterpunk Fiction rezultat mojega vlastitog rada, da se temelji na mojim istraživanjima te da se oslanja na izvore i radove navedene u bilješkama i popisu literature. Ni jedan dio mojega rada nije napisan na nedopušten način, odnosno nije prepisan iz necitiranih radova i ne krši bilo čija autorska prava. Izjavljujem da ni jedan dio ovoga rada nije iskorišten u kojem drugom radu pri bilo kojoj drugoj visokoškolskoj, znanstvenoj, obrazovnoj ili inoj ustanovi. Sadržaj mojega rada u potpunosti odgovara sadržaju obranjenoga i nakon obrane uređenoga rada. -
Analysis of the Body in Clive Barker's Splatterpunk Fiction
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Croatian Digital Thesis Repository Sveučilište u Zadru Odjel za anglistiku Diplomski sveučilišni studij engleskog jezika i književnosti: nastavnički smjer (dvopredmetni) Antonija Štefek The Transformation of the Self: Analysis of the Body in Clive Barker’s Splatterpunk Fiction Diplomski rad Zadar, 2019. Sveučilište u Zadru Odjel za anglistiku Diplomski sveučilišni studij engleskog jezika i književnosti; nastavnički smjer (dvopredmetni) The Transformation of the Self: Analysis of the Body in Clive Barker’s Splatterpunk Fiction Diplomski rad Student/ica: Mentor/ica: Antonija Štefek Izv. prof. dr. sc. Marko Lukić Zadar, 2019. Izjava o akademskoj čestitosti Ja, Antonija Štefek, ovime izjavljujem da je moj diplomski rad pod naslovom The Transformation of the Self: Analysis of the Body in Clive Barker’s Splatterpunk Fiction rezultat mojega vlastitog rada, da se temelji na mojim istraživanjima te da se oslanja na izvore i radove navedene u bilješkama i popisu literature. Ni jedan dio mojega rada nije napisan na nedopušten način, odnosno nije prepisan iz necitiranih radova i ne krši bilo čija autorska prava. Izjavljujem da ni jedan dio ovoga rada nije iskorišten u kojem drugom radu pri bilo kojoj drugoj visokoškolskoj, znanstvenoj, obrazovnoj ili inoj ustanovi. Sadržaj mojega rada u potpunosti odgovara sadržaju obranjenoga i nakon obrane uređenoga rada. Zadar, 12. lipanj 2019. Štefek 4 Table of contents 1. Introduction ................................................................................................................................5 -
Dark House Press
DARK HOUSE PRESS Charlie Harmon Fall 2014 Harmon/Dark House Press/1 CONTENTS About Dark House Press 2 Why Dark House Press? 3 Review: After the People Lights Have Gone Off 4 Interview: Richard Thomas, Editor-in-Chief 8 Harmon/Dark House Press/2 Dark House Press Web address: thedarkhousepress.com Founded: 2013 Publisher: Victor David Giron Editor-In-Chief: Richard Thomas Senior Editor: Jacob S. Knabb What they want: "Neo-noir, fantasy, science-fiction, horror, literary, magical realism, transgressive, crime, surrealism, and the grotesque. Everything we like has an elevated perspective, a literary voice, so whatever the genre, avoid the expected, the formulaic, the same old stories and voices. Memoir and poetry will be a very hard sale but we’re not saying 100% no yet—the same for YA/NA. We are currently looking for short story collections of at least 40,000 words (with 10-20% unpublished) and novels that are around 60,000 words, no more than 80,000. Word count will never be a reason we reject a collection or novel, it’s always about the writing. These are just guidelines." What they don't want: "Erotica, romance, most nonfiction, and classic fantasy, classic science fiction, and classic horror (same old monsters and cheap thrills)." Recent publications: The New Black, edited by Richard Thomas; After the People Lights Have Gone Off, by Stephen Graham Jones; Echo Lake, by Letitia Trent Forthcoming: The Doors You Mark Are Your Own, by Okla Elliot and Raul Clement (March 2015); Exigencies: A Neo-Noir Anthology, edited by Richard Thomas (April 2015) Harmon/Dark House Press/3 Why Dark House Press? A series of coincidences led to my choice of Dark House Press.