Langbeschreibung
This volume contains essays from international scholars covering a wide range of topics, including werewolves, mummies, fairies, devils, time travel, ghosts, haunted spaces and objects, race, gender, queerness, monstrosity, madness, incest, empire, medicine, and science.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Toward a Female Fantastic Rebecca D. Soares, Lizzie Harris McCormick, and Jennifer Mitchell Section 1: 1. Rubbish, Treasure, Litter, Tatters: Fantastic Objects in Context Jill Galvan 2. Framing the Female Narrative: Subversive Ghost Storytelling in Works by Margaret Oliphant, Vernon Lee, and Edith Nesbit Anne DeLong 3. Monstrous Femininity and Objectified Masculinity in Daphne du Maurier's "The Doll" Donna Mitchell 4. Uncanny Mediums: Haunted Radio, Supernaturally Intuitive Women, and Agatha Christie's "Wireless" Julia Panko 5. Buyer Beware: Haunted Objects in the Supernatural Tales of Margery Lawrence Melissa Edmundson Section 2: Profoundly and Irresolvably Political: Fantastic Spaces Luke Thurston 1. Female Desire, Colonial Ireland, and the "limits of the possible" in E. OE. Somerville and Martin Ross's The Silver Fox Anne Jamison 2. The Haunting House in Elizabeth Bowen's "The Shadowy Third" Céline Magot 3. Faerie Fruit and the Queer Codes of Feminist High Fantasy: Lud-in-the-Mist by Hope Mirrlees Jean Mills Section 3: The Fantastic and the Modern Female Experience: Fantastic People Scott Rogers 1. Marie Corelli's Ziska and Fantastic Feminism Mary Clai Jones 2. The Fantastic and the Woman Question in Edith Nesbit's Male Gothic Stories Andrew Hock Soon Ng 3. Fantastic Transformations: Queer Desires and "Uncanny Time" in Work by Radclyffe Hall and Virginia Woolf Jennifer Mitchell 4. "To find my real friends I have to travel a long way": Queer Time Travel in Katharine Burdekin's Speculative Fiction Elizabeth English Section 4: Invitation to Dissidence: Fantastic Creatures Jessica DeCoux 1. Rewriting the Romantic Satan: The Sorrows and Cynicism of Marie Corelli Colleen Morrissey 2. Beauty is the Beast: Shapeshifting, Suffrage, and Sexuality in Clemence Housman's The Were-wolf and Aino Kallas's The Wolf's Bride Lizzie Harris McCormick 3. The Doctor Treats the Ten-Breasted Monster: Medicine, the Fantastic Body, and Ideological Abuse in Djuna Barnes's Ryder Kate Schnur