Monster marks: sliding significations of the groteque in popular fiction
Kelso, Sylvia (1999) Monster marks: sliding significations of the groteque in popular fiction. In: Mills, Alice, (ed.) Seriously Weird: Papers on the Grotesque. Studies on Themes and Motifs in Literature (43). Peter Lang, New York, USA, pp. 105-114.
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Abstract
[Extract] My thinking about the grotesque first evoked a blurry but distinctly mediaeval image: gargoyles posted outside a cathedral, imps hidden under the misericord, or support for kneeling, inside. This occludes the term's history, which begins with Vitruvius' condemnation of hybrid human, animal and vegetable forms in early imperial Roman frescoes. Named "grotesque" after their rediscovery in the fifteenth-century excavations of Nero's Golden House, they were adapted by Rafael's school of painting, scorned by Neo-classicism and re-valorized by Victor Hugo in the Romantic period before being subjected to the tender mercies of psychoanalysts in Freud's wake. The inside/outside pattern of the gargoyles and imps, however, led me straight to more recent theorisations of the grotesque as a signifier in class struggle, beginning with Bakhtin.
Item ID: | 37342 |
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Item Type: | Book Chapter (Research - B1) |
ISBN: | 978-0-8204-4035-4 |
ISSN: | 1056-3970 |
Date Deposited: | 18 Dec 2019 01:15 |
FoR Codes: | 20 LANGUAGE, COMMUNICATION AND CULTURE > 2005 Literary Studies > 200502 Australian Literature (excl Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Literature) @ 30% 20 LANGUAGE, COMMUNICATION AND CULTURE > 2005 Literary Studies > 200506 North American Literature @ 70% |
SEO Codes: | 95 CULTURAL UNDERSTANDING > 9502 Communication > 950203 Languages and Literature @ 100% |
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