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Rife with sexuality, chaos, confusion, and terror, the Gothic has seemed to many of its recent readers to be a subversive genre, resisting enforced gender constructions of straitened notions of rationality, disinterring that which has been forbidden or repressed.
In Alien Nation Cannon Schmitt moves away from these models of the genre to chart, instead, the ways in which Gothic fictions and conventions gave shape to a sense of English nationality during the century in which British imperial power was stretching out its greatest reach.
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Subjects
Autobiography, English Horror tales, English fiction, Gothic revival (Literature), History, History and criticism, Horror tales, English, National characteristics, English, in literature, Nationalism, Nationalism in literature, De quincey, thomas, 1785-1859, English fiction, history and criticism, 19th century, National characteristics in literature, Nationalism, great britain, Horror tales, history and criticismPlaces
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19th centuryShowing 2 featured editions. View all 2 editions?
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1
Alien Nation: Nineteenth-Century Gothic Fictions and English Nationality
2018, University of Pennsylvania Press
in English
1512818585 9781512818581
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2
Alien nation: nineteenth-century Gothic fictions and English nationality
1997, University of Pennsylvania Press
in English
0812233514 9780812233513
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