Monsters of Our Own Making: The Peculiar Pleasures of FearUniversity Press of Kentucky, 2007 M02 23 - 441 páginas Since the beginning of storytelling, monsters of all kinds have inhabited myths, legends, folklore, and oral traditions, and they continue to thrive amidst society's ever-increasing attraction to the thrill of experiencing fear. Today many of us seek out horror movies, read thrillers and Gothic novels, and visit haunted houses, in our endless pursuit of the macabre and exciting. In Monsters of Our Own Making: The Peculiar Pleasures of Fear, Marina Warner explores the world of bogeys from their incarnation as ogres in nursery tales to their current role in the new, twisted reality of contemporary conflicts, where there is no guarantee of a happy ending. Marina Warner digs into the past to uncover the origins of these myths, to examine their history and social function over time. Paying particular attention to the prevalence of male figures of terror, Warner reveals their connections to current ideas about sexuality and power, identity and ethnicity, youth and age. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 66
... popular fiction and artefacts are not exclusively male , nor always specially masculine in character , so I found that No Go the Bogeyman took another direction , away from the historical study of gender towards a cultural exploration ...
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Contenido
III | 4 |
IV | 21 |
V | 23 |
VI | 48 |
VII | 53 |
VIII | 78 |
IX | 82 |
X | 95 |
XIX | 224 |
XX | 239 |
XXI | 246 |
XXII | 262 |
XXIII | 284 |
XXIV | 302 |
XXV | 326 |
XXVI | 340 |
XI | 115 |
XII | 126 |
XIII | 136 |
XIV | 161 |
XV | 185 |
XVI | 192 |
XVIII | 208 |
XXVII | 348 |
XXVIII | 374 |
XXIX | 388 |
XXX | 394 |
XXXI | 429 |
431 | |