Showing 1 - 10 results of 10 for search 'Monster Quest*', query time: 0.06s Refine Results
  1. 1

    Monsters and Heroes: The Ironies of Black Subjectivity in Stephen Crane’s The Monster and Richard Wright’s The Man Who Lived Underground by Joseph L. Lewis

    Published 2012-04-01
    “…Crane et Wright ont le projet commun de proposer une construction des concepts de race, d'identité et de représentation à travers le personnage du monstre, mais leurs visions s'opposent en raison de leurs origines culturelles. Je pose alors la question suivante : dans quelle mesure les origines culturelles peuvent-elles orienter la réception des images littéraires et influencer la manière de présenter ces images dans la littérature américaine ? …”
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  2. 2

    Monster or Missing Link? The Mermaid and the Victorian Imagination by Béatrice Laurent

    Published 2017-03-01
    “…A contemporary form of human-animal hybridism, however, raised serious questions about the ontological definition of human nature. …”
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  3. 3

    Monsters Among Us: In What Ways Can the Viral Jubilee’s Trans Debate Video Contribute to Educational Discussions? by Sheng-Hsiang Lance Peng

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Additionally, the value of guiding students to consistently question «who, where, and why» is emphasised, with a focus on how a monstrous lens can contribute to the enhancement of developmental learning experiences. …”
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  4. 4

    Epistemic Disruptions. Autofiction and Identity Politics in Paul B. Preciado’s Can the Monster Speak? (2020) and Kim de l’Horizon’s Blutbuch (2022) by Stephanie Bremerich

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…Both texts use autofiction as a means of epistemic disruption, that is as a critical questioning of Western epistemology, especially with regard to academic discourse (Preciado) and cultural memory (de l’Horizon). …”
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  5. 5

    Frontières de l’humain et technologies de genre monstrueux by Kevin Lambert

    Published 2019-12-01
    “…In fact, Cooper's novel questions the link between gender and monster: the monster, just as gender, is exhibited as a cultural and discursive production, through the exploration of the sexual and cultural devices that produce it. …”
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  6. 6

    Le corps du monstre sans-papiers by Jean-Jacques Lecercle

    Published 2021-10-01
    “…Wells’ The Time Machine, then the question of the monstrosity of Frankenstein’s monster. …”
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  7. 7

    Dracula : mécanique des fluides et roman des angoisses circulatoires by Maël Baussand

    Published 2018-12-01
    “…Indeed, anxious Victorian concerns persisting about different types of flow lead us to question the concrete visibility of sexual bodily fluids (sperm, menses and milk) in the novel. …”
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  8. 8

    Rousseau et les Pongos by Thomas Robert

    Published 2012-12-01
    “…In note X of the Discours sur l’origine et les fondements de l’inégalité parmi les hommes, Rousseau calls the Pongoes up in the context of his anthropology. The question is to determine wether the Pongoes are human beings. …”
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  9. 9

    Doubleness on the New York Contemporary Experimental Stage: Bodies and Technology by Emeline Jouve

    Published 2018-11-01
    “…To what extent does the use of technology annihilate or magnify the physical presence of the actor, the traditional soul and raison d’être of the art of the theatre? To answer this question, this paper focuses on works by the pioneering Wooster Group (1975-), the eminent Big Art Group (1999-) and the new rising star of the New York experimental scene, Andrew Schneider (2015-). …”
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  10. 10

    As Spirits Speak: Interaction in Wauja Exoteric Ritual by Christopher Ball

    Published 2011-10-01
    “…In view of the gravity of the circumstance and the weight of the obligation it creates, the ritual interaction is a surprisingly inelaborate and quotidian counterpart to Wauja esoteric shamanic practice and elaborate collective rituals involving music and dance. I question how it is that Wauja ideology supports the practice of regular folk verbally channeling spirits, and suggest that in fact Wauja cultural ideologies of illness, language, and cosmology emerge in precisely such interactive texts as this. …”
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