William Blake's gothic imagination : bodies of horror /

Scholars of the Gothic have long recognized Blake's affinity with the genre. Yet, to date, no major scholarly study focused on Blake's intersection with the Gothic exists. William Blake's gothic imagination seeks to redress this disconnect. The papers here do not simply identify Blake...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Bundock, Christopher (Editor), Effinger, Elizabeth (Editor)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Manchester : Manchester University Press, [2018]
Subjects:
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction / Chris Bundock and Elizabeth Effinger
  • Part I: The bounding line of Blake's Gothic: forms, genres, and contexts. 1. 'Living form': William Blake's Gothic relations / David Baulch
  • 2. The horror of Rahab: towards an aesthetic context for William Blake's 'Gothic' form / Kiel Shaub
  • 3. The Gothic sublime / Claire Colebrook
  • Part II: The misbegotten. 4. Dark angels: Blake, Milton, and Lovecraft in Ridley Scott's Prometheus / Jason Whittaker
  • 5. William Blake's monstrous progeny: anatomy and the birth of horror in The [First] Book if Urizen / Lucy Cogan
  • 6. Blake's Gothic humour: the spectacle of dissection / Stephanie Codsi
  • Part III: Female space and the image. 7. The horrors of cration: globes, englobing powers, and Blake's archaeologies of the present / Peter Otto
  • 8. Female spaces and the Gothic imagination in The Book of Thel and Visions of the Daughters of Albion / Ana Elena González-Treviño
  • Part IV: Sex, desire, perversion. 9. The horrors of subjectivity / the jouissance of immanence / Mark Lussier
  • 10. 'Terrible Thunders' and 'Enormous Joys': potency and degeneracy in Blake's Vision and James Graham's celestial bed / Tristanne Connolly.