-
Alison Baker deposited Daemons and Pets as signifiers of social class in the group
Speculative and Science Fiction on Humanities Commons 8 years, 2 months agoThis paper seeks to examine whether daemons (which take the shape of animals) and familiar animals indicate the social class of characters in Harry Potter and His Dark Materials. Both series of books for young people were started at a time when neo-liberal politics were at the forefront of government, both in the late years of John Major’s C…[Read more]
-
Alison Baker deposited Protocols for the education of young witches and wizards in the group
Speculative and Science Fiction on Humanities Commons 8 years, 2 months agoThis paper discusses approaches to pedagogy outlined in three series of books for children and young adults. By the end of the presentation, I hope to have outlined what the education systems in these novels says about the culture and society presented in these books. The books are: JK Rowling’s Harry Potter series, Jonathan Stroud’s Bar…[Read more]
-
Laurie Ringer deposited Draft Handout on Critical Note Taking on Becky Chambers’ A Closed and Common Orbit: Reading 1 in the group
Speculative and Science Fiction on Humanities Commons 8 years, 2 months agoThis draft handout accompanied in-class discussion and instruction. There are two key objectives: 1) to model the practices of critical note taking, including close reading, connection making, and question asking; and 2) to document the first assigned reading from Becky Chambers’ A Closed and Common Orbit. This handout covers the first three c…[Read more]
-
Caitlin Duffy started the topic CFP: Literature as Activism, Stony Brook University English Graduate Conference in the discussion
Speculative and Science Fiction on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoStony Brook University
30th Annual English Graduate Conference
February 23rd, 2018
Literature as Activism
Keynote Speaker
Dr. Lisa Duggan, NYU
Literature is a social act. Our encounters with literature, history, philosophy, and even science are informed by the world in which these encounters take place. No matter what text we choose, we are…[Read more] -
Bill Hughes started the topic CFP: OGOM & Supernatural Cities present: The Urban Weird in the discussion
Speculative and Science Fiction on Humanities Commons 8 years, 4 months agoCFP: OGOM & Supernatural Cities present: The Urban Weird
University of Hertfordshire, 6-7 April, 2018
The OGOM Project is known for its imaginative events and symposia, which have often been accompanied by a media frenzy. We were the first to invite vampires into the academy back in 2010. Our most recent endeavour, Company of Wolves:…[Read more]
-
Bill Hughes started the topic CFP: OGOM & Supernatural Cities present: The Urban Weird in the discussion
Horror on Humanities Commons 8 years, 4 months agoCFP: OGOM & Supernatural Cities present: The Urban Weird
University of Hertfordshire, 6-7 April, 2018
The OGOM Project is known for its imaginative events and symposia, which have often been accompanied by a media frenzy. We were the first to invite vampires into the academy back in 2010. Our most recent endeavour, Company of Wolves:…[Read more]
-
Bill Hughes posted an update in the group
Gothicists on Humanities Commons 8 years, 4 months agoCFP: OGOM & Supernatural Cities present: The Urban Weird
University of Hertfordshire, 6-7 April, 2018The OGOM Project is known for its imaginative events and symposia, which have often been accompanied by a media frenzy. We were the first to invite vampires into the academy back in 2010. Our most recent endeavour, Company of Wolves:…[Read more]
-
Tobias Steiner deposited “Have you ever tried to un-make soup?” Legion’s roller-coaster ride through the Sixties in the group
Speculative and Science Fiction on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoLegion, one of the most recent iterations of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) on television, takes an unconventional road to remediating the 1960s as a cultural period.
-
Tobias Steiner deposited Meticulous world-building in Space: The Expanse, and the current resurgence of Science Fiction on TV in the group
Speculative and Science Fiction on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoThis CSTOnline blog post takes a look at the current resurgence of science fiction on television, and discusses these recent trends along the example of The Expanse, an adaptation of the successful space opera penned by scifi author James S. A. Corey.
-
Sherry Truffin deposited Joyce Carol Oates Revisits the Schoolhouse Gothic in the group
Horror on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoThe “Schoolhouse Gothic” represents teachers, students, and academic institutions using Gothic tropes such as the monster, the curse, and the trap. Joyce Carol Oates’s 2013 novel The Accursed both exemplifies and deviates from this tradition. Like other Schoolhouse Gothic works, The Accursed portrays the university as a place of mystified power…[Read more]
-
Sherry Truffin deposited Joyce Carol Oates Revisits the Schoolhouse Gothic in the group
Gothicists on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoThe “Schoolhouse Gothic” represents teachers, students, and academic institutions using Gothic tropes such as the monster, the curse, and the trap. Joyce Carol Oates’s 2013 novel The Accursed both exemplifies and deviates from this tradition. Like other Schoolhouse Gothic works, The Accursed portrays the university as a place of mystified power…[Read more]
-
Sherry Truffin deposited Creation Anxiety in Gothic Metafiction: The Dark Half and Lunar Park in the group
Horror on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoThe Gothic metafiction of Stephen King and Bret Easton Ellis focuses on author-protagonists who fear what they create because their creations are re-creations, projections of their creator’s anxieties, some conventionally Gothic (the multiple/split self) and others specific to postmodern conceptions of subjectivity in general and authorship in p…[Read more]
-
Sherry Truffin deposited Creation Anxiety in Gothic Metafiction: The Dark Half and Lunar Park in the group
Gothicists on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoThe Gothic metafiction of Stephen King and Bret Easton Ellis focuses on author-protagonists who fear what they create because their creations are re-creations, projections of their creator’s anxieties, some conventionally Gothic (the multiple/split self) and others specific to postmodern conceptions of subjectivity in general and authorship in p…[Read more]
-
Sherry Truffin deposited ‘Gigantic Paradox, Too … Monstrous for Solution’: Nightmarish Democracy and the Schoolhouse Gothic in “William Wilson” and The Secret History in the group
Horror on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoTo review the history of the Gothic as a counter-Enlightenment discourse, albeit an ambivalent one, is to see the suitability, if not the inevitability, of the Gothic treatment of education and educators. Presumably benign institutions, schools may seem more like unfeeling bureaucracies, brainwashing factories, militaristic zones, or lawless waste…[Read more]
-
Sherry Truffin deposited ‘Gigantic Paradox, Too … Monstrous for Solution’: Nightmarish Democracy and the Schoolhouse Gothic in “William Wilson” and The Secret History in the group
Gothicists on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoTo review the history of the Gothic as a counter-Enlightenment discourse, albeit an ambivalent one, is to see the suitability, if not the inevitability, of the Gothic treatment of education and educators. Presumably benign institutions, schools may seem more like unfeeling bureaucracies, brainwashing factories, militaristic zones, or lawless waste…[Read more]
-
Sherry Truffin deposited Zombies in the Classroom: Education as Consumption in Two Novels by Joyce Carol Oates in the group
Horror on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoTo review the history of the Gothic as a counter-Enlightenment discourse is to see the suitability, if not the inevitability, of the Gothic treatment of education and educators. Schools and schoolteachers are keepers and transmitters of enlightenment. At the same time, schools and teachers are figures of power. They decide when children work, when…[Read more]
-
Sherry Truffin deposited Zombies in the Classroom: Education as Consumption in Two Novels by Joyce Carol Oates in the group
Gothicists on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoTo review the history of the Gothic as a counter-Enlightenment discourse is to see the suitability, if not the inevitability, of the Gothic treatment of education and educators. Schools and schoolteachers are keepers and transmitters of enlightenment. At the same time, schools and teachers are figures of power. They decide when children work, when…[Read more]
-
Sherry Truffin deposited ‘This is what passes for free will’: Chuck Palahniuk’s Postmodern Gothic in the group
Horror on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoLiterary Gothic emerged in the eighteenth century, the so-called Age of Reason, and takes as its subject the enemies of reason: superstition, madness, barbarism, taboo, etc. In the Gothic, these adversaries are engaged and often defeated. At the same time, however, the Gothic is a claustrophobic, paranoid literature, both profoundly skeptical of…[Read more]
-
Sherry Truffin deposited ‘This is what passes for free will’: Chuck Palahniuk’s Postmodern Gothic in the group
Gothicists on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoLiterary Gothic emerged in the eighteenth century, the so-called Age of Reason, and takes as its subject the enemies of reason: superstition, madness, barbarism, taboo, etc. In the Gothic, these adversaries are engaged and often defeated. At the same time, however, the Gothic is a claustrophobic, paranoid literature, both profoundly skeptical of…[Read more]
-
Sherry Truffin deposited ‘Terrors of the Night’: Salvation, Gender, and the Gothic in James Baldwin’s Go Tell It On The Mountain in the group
Horror on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoThis essay examines the blend of male and female Gothic conventions in James Baldwin’s Go Tell It On The Mountain
- Load More