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The Uses of Phobia

The Uses of Phobia Essays on Literature and Film

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Critical Quarterly Book Series

The Uses of Phobia

Essays on Literature and Film

David Trotter

Literary Criticism / Semiotics & Theory

The essays brought together in this book understand phobia not as a pathology, but as a versatile moral, political, and aesthetic resource – and one with a history. They demonstrate that enquiry into strong feelings of aversion has enabled writers and film-makers to say and show things they could not otherwise have said or shown; and in this way to get profoundly and provocatively to grips with the modern condition.
  • Makes extensive reference to original readings of a wide range of literary texts and films, from the 1850s to the present
  • Places a strong emphasis on the value phobia has held, in particular, for women activists, writers, and film-makers
  • Discusses a range of writers and film-makers from Dickens, Thackeray, and George Eliot through Hardy, Joyce, Ford and Woolf; from Jean Renoir through Hitchcock and Truffaut to Margarethe von Trotta and Pedro Almodóvar
  • Intervention in key debates in cultural theory and cultural history
David Trotter is King Edward VII Professor of English Literature at the University of Cambridge. He was co-founder of the Cambridge Screen Media Group, and has published extensively on nineteenth- and twentieth-century British and American literature.

Publication Date: 21 June 2010
Publisher: Wiley
Imprint: Wiley-Blackwell
ISBN-13: 9781444333848
Format: Paperback / softback
Page Count: 192
Weight (oz): 11.2

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