Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu: Gothic Grotesque and the Huguenot Inheritance

2012 ◽  
pp. 362-376
Author(s):  
Alison Milbank
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Κωνσταντίνα Τορτομάνη

Η παρούσα διατριβή φιλοδοξεί να ερευνήσει τις θεωρητικές πτυχές της σχέσης ιστορίας και λογοτεχνίας μέσα από την λειτουργία και σημασία του Γοτθικού μυθιστορήματος στο μακρύ 19ο αιώνα καθώς και να αναλύσει τις στερεοτυπικές εικόνες της διαφορετικότητας της Νοτιοανατολικής Ευρώπης όπως κατασκευάστηκαν, αναπαράχθηκαν και κυκλοφόρησαν στη βρετανική δημοφιλή κουλτούρα κατά τον μακρύ 19ο αιώνα. Το κύριο μέρος της αποτελείται από την ανάλυση τεσσάρων δημοφιλών γοτθικών μυθιστορημάτων: The Vampyre: A Tale (1819) του John William Polidori, το Carmilla (1872) του Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu, το Dracula (1897) και το Lady of the Shroud (1909) του Bram Stoker. Η διατριβή μελετά την απήχηση των μυθιστορημάτων αυτών ως φορέων διαμόρφωσης των αντιλήψεων σχετικά με την Βρετανική ταυτότητα, την αυτοκρατορία και την πολιτισμική της σημασία. Φωτίζει επίσης την ταυτότητα του βάρβαρου «άλλου», τις αντιλήψεις για το φύλο, ακόμα και τη γεωπολιτική της αυτοκρατορίας και τον πολιτιστικό ιμπεριαλισμό μέσω της διάδοσης στερεοτύπων. Τέλος, η παρούσα διατριβή επιχειρεί να τοποθετήσει τη Βρετανική ρητορική για την ετερότητα της Νοτιοανατολικής Ευρώπης σε ένα ευρύτερο πλαίσιο, εξετάζοντάς την και συγκρίνοντάς την με άλλους «κατώτερους» λαούς, βγαίνοντας έτσι από τα στενά πλαίσια του Οριενταλισμού και του Βαλκανισμού.


1973 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 100-a-100
Author(s):  
WILLIAM MCCORMACK

Author(s):  
Richard Jorge Fernández

Monsters and the idea of monstrosity are central tenets of Gothic fiction. Such figures as vampires and werewolves have been extensively used to represent the menacing Other in an overtly physical way, identifying the colonial Other as the main threat to civilised British society. However, this physically threatening monster evolved, in later manifestations of the genre, into a more psychological, mind-threatening being and, thus, werewolves were left behind in exchange for psychological fear. In Ireland, however, this change implied a further step. Traditional ethnographic divisions have tended towards the dichotomy Anglo-Irish coloniser versus Catholic colonised, and early examples of Irish Gothic fiction displayed the latter as the monstrous Other. However, the nineteenth century witnessed a move forward in the development of the genre in Ireland. This article shows how the change from physical to psychological threat implies a transformation or, rather, a displacement—the monstrous Other ceases to be Catholic to instead become an Anglo-Irish manifestation. To do so, this study considers the later short fictions of Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu and analyses how theDublin-born writer conveys his postcolonial concerns over his own class by depicting them simultaneously as the causers of and sufferers from their own colonial misdeeds.


Author(s):  
Ian Campbell Ross

This chapter surveys the history of Irish crime fiction, a genre whose contemporary popularity tends to obscure its origins in the works of nineteenth-century writers including Gerald Griffin, Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu, Oscar Wilde, and L. T. Meade. The discussion highlights some of the most significant works that lie along the broad spectrum of writing that ‘crime fiction’ occupies and, in so doing, reveals the plurality of ‘Irish’ crime fiction over the course of 180 years. Among the topics covered are the features that distinguish nineteenth-century Irish crime writing from its British counterpart; the emergence of Irish-language crime fiction in the early part of the twentieth century, and the defining features of contemporary Irish crime fiction, which has flourished domestically and internationally since the 1990s.


2013 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 182-187
Author(s):  
Jelena Brakovska

Notwithstanding the fact that the Anglo-Irish writer Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu was one of the most popular writers of the British Victorian era, his name and most of his works are not well-known to a common reader. The present research investigates how the author inventively modifies traditional Gothic elements and penetrates them into human’s consciousness. Such Le Fanu’s metamorphoses and innovations make the artistic world of his prose more realistic and psychological. As a result, the article presents a comparative literary study of Le Fanu’s text manipulations which seem to lead to the creation of Le Fanu’s own kind of “psychological” Gothic.


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