04209nam 22006251 450 991046492360332120200520144314.01-61147-583-X(CKB)3710000000021414(EBL)1466965(OCoLC)861080971(SSID)ssj0001001974(PQKBManifestationID)12372211(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001001974(PQKBWorkID)10997106(PQKB)10834860(MiAaPQ)EBC1466965(Au-PeEL)EBL1466965(CaPaEBR)ebr10780907(OCoLC)865564966(EXLCZ)99371000000002141420130709h20132013 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrImages of the modern vampire the hip and the atavistic /edited by Barbara Brodman and James E. DoanMadison ;Lanham, Maryland :Fairleigh Dickinson University Press :Co-published with The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc.,[2013]©20131 online resource (277 p.)Description based upon print version of record.1-61147-854-5 1-61147-582-1 Includes bibliographical references and index.Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction; PART I. THE VAMPIRE IN MODERN FILM; Chapter 1. Reflecting Dracula: The Undead in Alfred Hitchcock's Shadow of a Doubt; Chapter 2. A Species of One: The Atavistic Vampire from Dracula to The Wisdom of Crocodiles; Chapter 3. Dracula the Anti-Christ: New Resurrection of an Immortal Prejudice; Chapter 4. Eat Me! The Morality of Hunger in Vampiric Cuisine; PART II. RACE, GENDER AND THE VAMPIRE; Chapter 5. The Madonna and Child: Reevaluating Social Conventions through Anne Rice's Forgotten FemalesChapter 6. Female Empowerment: Buffy and Her Heiresses in ControlChapter 7. Lightening "The White Man's Burden": Evolution of the Vampire from the Victorian Racialism of Dracula to the New World Order of I Am Legend; Chapter 8. You're Nothing to Me But Another . . . [White] Vampire": A Study of theRepresentation of the Black Vampire in American Mainstream Cinema; Chapter 9. She Would Be No Man's Property Ever Again": Vampirism, Slavery, and Black Female Heroism in Contemporary African American Women's Fiction; PART III. NEW READINGS OF THE VAMPIREChapter 10. Blood-Abstinent Vampires and the Women Who Consume ThemChapter 11. "Exactly My Brand of Heroin": Contexts and the Creation of the Twilight Phenomenon; Chapter 12. Disciplinary Lessons: Myth, Female Desire, and the Monstrous Maternal in Stephenie Meyer's Twilight Series; Chapter 13. Vampire Vogue and Female Fashion: Dressing Skin and Dressing-Up in the Sookie Stackhouse and Twilight Series; Chapter 14. The Politics of Reproduction in Stephanie Meyer's Twilight Saga; Chapter 15. The Vampire from an Evolutionary Perspective in Japanese Animation: Blood+Chapter 16. Adapting Dracula to an Irish Context: Reconfiguring the Universal VampireSelected Bibliography; Index; About the Editors and ContributorsThis book presents the vampire as a truly international phenomenon, not restricted to the original folk character, the literary vampire (such as Dracula), or 20th-century film versions. Instead, we move around the world and into the 21st-century: reshaping the legend into a post-modern image that is psychologically and socially relevant while retaining elements of folklore mixed with a hint of science fiction. This book is intended for aficionados of folklore and mythology, as well as literary and film scholars, vampire devotees, and a more general audience interested in the supernVampiresCriticismElectronic books.Vampires.Criticism.398/.45Brodman Barbara869411Doan James E869412MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910464923603321Images of the modern vampire1941142UNINA