Redefining the American Gothic: From Wieland to Day of the Dead |
Contents
Old Worlds for New | 5 |
The Pathology of History | 23 |
Transforming Women | 37 |
Copyright | |
5 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Alice Doane's Appeal Alice's American Gothic American Gothic narrative anxiety Baraka Boston brother Brydon Carmilla Carter Carwin Chainsaw character Charles Brockden Brown child City of Night Clara culture dark death demonic Dianthe Doane Doll Dracula Elsie Venner Elsie's emotional English evil eyes father fear female figure film's Franklin genre Gothic fiction Gothic novel Gothic quest Gothic vision Gothicist haunted Hawthorne Hawthorne's Henry James Hills Have Eyes Holmes Hopkins's horror film identity imaginative Imamu Amiri Baraka incest James's Jolly Corner journey Leatherface Ligeia Lionel Lincoln literary Literature Living Dead Mira modern horror Monster murdered mystery narrator narrator's nightmare past Pauline Hopkins Poe's political Psycho Ralph reader Rechy Rechy's Reuel reveals romance Romero scene sense sexual social story subsequent text references supernatural tale Telassar terror theme tion traditional transformation University Press vampire voice Wieland witch woman women writes York young Zelley zombies