The Monstrous Bodies of the American Gothic

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Serval ID
serval:BIB_9A7C888134D0
Type
A part of a book
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
The Monstrous Bodies of the American Gothic
Title of the book
The Cambridge Companion to American Literature and the Body
Author(s)
Soltysik Monnet Agnieszka
Publisher
Travis Foster
Publication state
Published
Issued date
01/06/2022
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Pages
59-72
Language
english
Abstract

American gothic fiction works across and against the binary fault lines of U.S. somatic categorization: white and black, undead and dead, male and female, normative and monstrous, sane and insane, and also—as these identities gradually became salient—straight and queer. Taking this cultural and ideological work as a point of departure, this chapter will first provide a brief overview of the origins of the American Gothic, as it arose from three national elements that intermingled with the British Gothic novel in the late eighteenth century: hostile encounters between settlers and Native Americans, the repressions and distrust of the body of the Puritans, and the horror of the African slave’s plight in American history. In a second part, this chapter will examine how able-ness, health, race, gender and sexuality have all shaped the fluctuating boundaries of normative versus monstrous embodiment in the American Gothic.
Keywords
American Gothic, African American, Native American, Asian American, Puritan, gender, Maxine Hong Kingston, Edgar Allan Poe, Louisa May Alcott, John Edgar Wideman
Create date
18/01/2023 15:28
Last modification date
19/01/2023 8:13
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