
Queer Gothic
Description
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Explores a full spectrum of Gothic works broadly understood as queer, from the eighteenth century to today
- Explores Gothic themes through nuanced queer lenses
- Re-visits past ideas of queer theory and expands on them within Gothic context
- Focuses on time periods, genres, and queer Gothic modes
Queer Gothic: An Edinburgh Companion features sixteen essays that interrogate queer theory's intersections with the Gothic. By re-visiting the usefulness of the term 'queer' and pushing queer theoretical frameworks into new territory, this volume explores the ways that Gothic and queer work alongside each other: one as a marginalised genre and the other as a marginalised identity. Considering both major and lesser-known Gothic works, and ranging from the canonical (poetry and fiction) to the popular (film, video games, music, and visual and performance art), it offers queer and trans perspectives on a wide selection of Gothic modes, genres and texts from fiction such as Hugh Walpole's The Castle of Otranto to Jeanette Winterson's The Daylight Gate, films from Nosferatu to The Cured and TV shows including In the Flesh and Pose.
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Content
- Cover
- Half Title
- Series Page
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgements
- Dedication
- Introduction to Queer Gothic: 'I would like, if I may, to take you on a strange journey'
- Part I Queer Times
- 1. Desiring Deformity in the Romantic Gothic
- 2. Queer Gothic: Romantic Origins and Victorian Innovations
- 3. Strange Cases of the Queer fin de siècle: Law, Medicine and the Gothic Imaginative Mode
- 4. Gothic Cinema and Sexology in the Weimar Republic: Towards a Queer Gothic Aesthetic on Screen
- 5. 'Tarting up ideas in costume jewellery': Contemporary Gothic Camp
- Part II Queer Monsters
- 6. Queer Vampires: What We Want is in the Shadows
- 7. Queer Zombies
- 8. 'Queer-Wolves and Wolf-Boyz and Were-Bears, Oh My!': Queering the Wolf in New Queer Horror Film and TV
- 9. 'Spectrality is in part a mode of historicity': Representations of Spectrality in Queer Historiography and Contemporary Fiction
- 10. Witchcraft, Gender and Queerness in Contemporary British Literature
- Part III Queer Forms
- 11. Queer Gothic Poetry
- 12. Queer Gothic Visual Art: A Twisted Path from the Eighteenth Century to the Twenty-First
- 13. Queering Gothic Slash Fandoms: Harry Potter, Ginger Snaps and Worldbuilding
- 14. Solidarity is More than a Slogan: Queer Representation in the Virtual World
- 15. 'Y'all ain't from around these parts': Queer Displacement in American Folk Horror
- 16. This is What Queer Resistance Looks Like: AIDS Gothic Art
- Bibliography
- Filmography
- Notes on Contributors
- Index
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