Crisis and Liminality in Irish and North American Vampire Stories: “Interviewing Contemporary Vampires”

dc.contributor.affiliationUniversidade de Santiago de Compostela. Facultade de Filoloxíagl
dc.contributor.authorAcuña Rodríguez, Aitana
dc.contributor.tutorEstévez Saá, Margarita
dc.date.accessioned2020-11-06T10:31:34Z
dc.date.available2020-11-06T10:31:34Z
dc.date.issued2018-10-24
dc.descriptionTraballo Fin de Grao en Lingua e Literatura Inglesas. Curso 2018-2019gl
dc.description.abstractOver the course of time, the figure of the vampire has been associated to moments of individual, social, cultural and political crisis in the history of humanity. Sheridan LeFanu's "Carmilla" (1872) and Bram Stoker's "Dracula" (1892) are early examples which ghoticized fin-de-siècle cultural, social and political threats, such as the desintegration of British Empire fears of the industrial middle class or the progressive visibility of women in the public sphere. The vampire myth has to be understood as part of fin-de-siècle "monstrous" narratives which adress such cultural, social and political fears in terms of what Stephen Arata has called "reverse collonization" (1990), a response to cultural guilt which also entails powerful critiques of dominat ideologies. From this moment onwards, the figure of the vampire has been recurrently used to represent the most diverse fears and crisis in especially troubled and liminal times and circumstances. Taking as referents the classic Irish tales by Sheridan Le Fanu and by Bram Stoker, the aim of this dissertation is to examine the twenty- and twenty-first-century literary and cinematographic instances of the uses and functions of the trope of the vampiregl
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10347/23574
dc.language.isoenggl
dc.rights.accessRightsopen accessgl
dc.subjectVampirosgl
dc.subjectJoseph Sheridan Le Fanugl
dc.subjectBram Stokergl
dc.subjectLiteratura góticagl
dc.subjectCine góticogl
dc.subjectLiteratura e sociedadegl
dc.subjectLiteratura irlandesagl
dc.subjectLiteratura americanagl
dc.subject.classificationMaterias::Investigación::62 Ciencias de las artes y las letras::6202 Teoría, análisis y crítica literarias::620202 Análisis literariogl
dc.subject.classificationMaterias::Investigación::62 Ciencias de las artes y las letras::6203 Teoría, análisis y crítica de las bellas artes::620301 Cinematografíagl
dc.subject.classificationMaterias::Investigación::63 Sociología::6301 Sociología cultural::630109 Sociología de la literaturagl
dc.subject.classificationMaterias::Investigación::51 Antropología::5101 Antropología cultural::510107 Mitosgl
dc.titleCrisis and Liminality in Irish and North American Vampire Stories: “Interviewing Contemporary Vampires”gl
dc.typebachelor thesisgl
dspace.entity.typePublication
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relation.isTutorOfPublication.latestForDiscovery7fdde43e-e20e-482a-979f-8d3dd2bf0bf7

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