Horror literature hinges on one unique characteristic rarely found outside of the genre: monstrosity. Although monstrosity is often criticized for being designed to elicit specific responses (terror, horror, and revulsion) from readers for the sake...
F. Scott Fitzgerald’s images of the Jazz Age characterize the Twenties as a time of extravagance, a departure from the morally driven Victorian age. Modern America was far more concerned with excess and pretense than the prewar past and lacked...
Orlik, Peter B., School of Broadcast and Cinematic Arts
1975
Describes innovations in the use of radio instruction to primary school students in Ireland. Also discusses the coexistence of instructional television and radio in Ireland.
Weinstock, Jeffrey, Department of English Language and Literature
2007
This essay offers an overview to the ways in which nineteenth-century American female authors appropriated and manipulated Gothic themes in the periodical press with a special emphasis on the ghost story. It begins by discussing the appeal of the...