Disability and the Gothic
Call for papers
Amputation
Birth defects
Body Integrity Disorder
Body modification
Branding and scarification
Conjoined siblings
Corrective surgery
Degeneration
Hermaphroditism
Hospital culture
Human vivisection
Leprosy
Mental illness
Phantom limbs
Pigmentation variations
Post-apocalyptic bodies
Prostheses
Queer bodies
Ritual disfigurement
Supernumerary limbs
Zoomorphism
Proposals of approximately 500 words should be sent to the editors by 30 September 2013:
William Hughes, Department of English, Bath Spa University, Newton Park, Bath BA2 9BN UK e-mail w.hughes@bathspa.ac.uk
Andrew Smith, School of English, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S3 7RA UK e-mail andrew.smith1@sheffield.ac.uk
The relationship between disability and the Gothic, as Martha
Stoddard Holmes rightly observes, has been undertheorized by scholars of
the genre. This is surprising, given the intensity with which the
Gothic has historically explored and exploited the prejudices associated
with human difference as manifested in physiological and mental
deviations from a perceived norm. The proposed volume, which will be
presented within the established International Gothic Series, published
by Manchester University Press, will explore the uses and abuses of
disability in Gothic fiction from the eighteenth century to the present,
and will advance a genuinely international and multicultural analysis
of this neglected aspect of Gothic stylistics. We particularly welcome
papers that discuss Gothic textuality beyond the established European
and American canon. Issues which might be explored by contributors could
include (but are not limited to):
Abject bodiesAmputation
Birth defects
Body Integrity Disorder
Body modification
Branding and scarification
Conjoined siblings
Corrective surgery
Degeneration
Hermaphroditism
Hospital culture
Human vivisection
Leprosy
Mental illness
Phantom limbs
Pigmentation variations
Post-apocalyptic bodies
Prostheses
Queer bodies
Ritual disfigurement
Supernumerary limbs
Zoomorphism
Proposals of approximately 500 words should be sent to the editors by 30 September 2013:
William Hughes, Department of English, Bath Spa University, Newton Park, Bath BA2 9BN UK e-mail w.hughes@bathspa.ac.uk
Andrew Smith, School of English, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S3 7RA UK e-mail andrew.smith1@sheffield.ac.uk
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