5,706 results on '"monster"'
Search Results
2. Blue Öyster Cult's "Godzilla": An American Kaiju Anthem.
- Author
-
Compora, Daniel Patrick
- Subjects
MUSICAL performance ,COLD War & politics ,MONSTERS - Abstract
In 1978, the American hard rock band Blue Öyster Cult released the song "Godzilla" as the first single from the fifth studio album Spectres. Despite not registering on popular charts, it would eventually evolve into an iconic song of its era. "Godzilla" continues to receive airplay on classic rock stations, and it remains a staple of the band's touring performances. In 2019, a cover of the song, more than forty years after its release, made its film debut in Godzilla: King of the Monsters. Though the song is primarily a tribute to the Japanese monster from which it gets its name, "Godzilla" also reflects the nuclear fear and paranoia of the 1970s Cold War era. "Godzilla's" cultural impact, the song's lyrics, the Cold War context in which it was written, and its connection to the kaiju films featuring the famous monster are examined. While this is the most popular and well-known song dedicated to Godzilla, it is not the only one. Other compositions have, but they have failed to achieve the iconic status that Blue Öyster Cult's version has attained. This song has evolved into an unofficial anthem for the great monster. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Evergreen Avengers: Nature and Kaijū in the Twenty-First Century.
- Author
-
Rhoads, Sean and Okazaki, Brooke McCorkle
- Subjects
ECOCRITICISM ,MONSTERS ,TELEVISION series - Abstract
After a decade of dormancy following the release of Tōhō Studios' Godzilla: Final Wars (2004), Godzilla and other kaijū burst back onto the scene with Legendary Pictures' Godzilla (2014). Several American sequels and a television series set in Legendary's MonsterVerse quickly followed over the next ten years. Meanwhile, Japan's Tōhō used their radioactive creation's global success to reignite their own films with Shin Godzilla (2016), an animated trilogy, and Godzilla Minus One (2023). Short-format media like Chibi Godzilla and Godziban also circulated thanks to streaming services. Similarly, Godzilla's longtime competitor Gamera also emerged from hibernation in an animated series produced by Kadokawa Corporation, Gamera Rebirth (2023). But how do these new installations relate to or depart from their predecessors' predilection to address environmental concerns? This article continues the ecocritical analysis of kaijū eiga, expanding it to the 2010s and 2020s, as a coda to our duograph Japan's Green Monsters (2018). This article picks up where we left off, examining the recent releases from an ecocritical standpoint. This analysis reveals that today's films remain steeped in environmental commentary, but both fragmented and updated for the new concerns of the twenty-first century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Horror movies and the social unconscious.
- Author
-
Førre, Øystein
- Subjects
- *
DREAM interpretation , *DREAMS , *HORROR films , *EMOTIONAL trauma , *ISOMORPHISM (Mathematics) - Abstract
In this paper I will attempt to show how horror movies function as societies' nightmares. They can be interpreted as depictions of our collective struggle to integrate and inevitably repress national trauma. In most psychotherapeutic traditions dreams are regarded as valuable communications from the unconscious and vital for psychological maturation. Among dreams, nightmares often point to indigestible experiences on an individual level. Similarly I will argue that horror movies grapple with our collective traumas and can be interpreted just like dreams. They are our collective nightmares. The logic of this approach is based on psychodynamic and analytic theory and the shared characteristics (isomorphism) of watching a movie and having a dream. Relevant psychodynamic theory and movie analysis will be used to further this point. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Automorphism groups of axial algebras.
- Author
-
Gorshkov, I.B., M c Inroy, J., Mudziiri Shumba, T.M., and Shpectorov, S.
- Subjects
- *
NONASSOCIATIVE algebras , *GROUP algebras , *JORDAN algebras , *COMMUTATIVE algebra , *ALGEBRA - Abstract
Axial algebras are a class of commutative non-associative algebras which have a natural group of automorphisms, called the Miyamoto group. The motivating example is the Griess algebra which has the Monster sporadic simple group as its Miyamoto group. Previously, using an expansion algorithm, about 200 examples of axial algebras in the same class as the Griess algebra have been constructed in dimensions up to about 300. In this list, we see many reoccurring dimensions which suggests that there may be some unexpected isomorphisms. Such isomorphisms can be found when the full automorphism groups of the algebras are known. Hence, in this paper, we develop methods for computing the full automorphism groups of axial algebras and apply them to a number of examples of dimensions up to 151. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The monster and the self: Taking on the monstrosity of sexual violations.
- Author
-
Kruse, Anja Emilie and Skilbrei, May-Len
- Subjects
- *
SEXUAL assault , *SEX crimes , *MONSTERS , *REHABILITATION , *JUSTICE - Abstract
The contemporary normative climate regarding sexual violence affects how perpetrators of such violence relate to their harmful acts. In this article, we analyze how men convicted of sex offences are affected by how perpetrators of such offences are often represented as monsters and ask what this tells us about what characterizes the Monster as a figure. While people convicted of sexual offences are likened to monsters in many contexts, there is little research that unpacks the characteristics of this figure and how it is contingent on ideas about and the regulation of sex offending. By analyzing data from qualitative interviews with 17 men convicted of sexual offences in Norway, we found that, although they presented themselves and the acts they were convicted of committing differently, they had a common fear of being identified as a monster. In these narratives, a monster was characterized by (1) intentionality—having intentionally harmed others, (2) preference—having a sexual preference for harmful, nonconsensual sex, and (3) authenticity—being authentically violent. We conceive of the narrative processes that the participants engage in as forms of social abjection and discuss the consequences that abjection may have for accountability, rehabilitation, and justice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Transfigurazioni mostruose. Tra rabbia, disforia ed euforia
- Author
-
Francesco Cattani
- Subjects
monster ,figurations ,transfeminism ,rosi braidotti ,paul b. preciado ,susan stryker ,Social Sciences ,Language and Literature - Abstract
The article offers a theoretical exploration of one of the infinite potentialities of the monstrous body, a body that appears as deviant, non-conforming, as it escapes the pre-established boundaries of what is deemed as acceptable; it exceeds and in this exceeding it imposes its diversity while imposing a re-vision. These potentialities have been recognised by feminist, posthuman, and in particular trans* and transfeminist literature and theory, and it is the latter that will be here tackled. The trans* body is one of those bodies that are still demonised as monstrous, and it is precisely on account of that perversity to which it is associated, that, in some instances, it has chosen to identify and align with the monster. Embracing monstrosity becomes not only a symbolic but a political act of disidentification that implies embracing otherness with strength and pride: rejecting the impositions of a normative body, acknowledging one’s own multiplicity and opening up to multiplicities; becoming a figure of ‘potent fusions,’ as well as of ‘potent alliances.’
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. What are Monsters in Computer Games?
- Author
-
Vladislav V. Kirichenko
- Subjects
game studies ,computer game ,representation ,gameplay ,monster ,sublime ,abject ,antagonist ,History (General) ,D1-2009 ,Philosophy (General) ,B1-5802 - Abstract
The current paper is a review of the monograph by Czech computer games researcher Jaroslav Švelch “Player vs. Monster. The Making and Breaking of Videogame Monstrosity” (2023). Švelch's work is dedicated to the figure of the monster in the gaming industry. The first chapter examines different theoretical approaches to the monstrosity. The second chapter touches on the classic gaming concept: “Player vs. Environment”. The third chapter analyzes “monster realism” as a special form of visuality. The fourth chapter of the monograph is devoted to new trends in game designers’ attitudes towards the monstrous: the manifestation of sympathy for monsters, the formlessness and incorporeality of monsters.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. ¿QUE ES UN LOCO? DE CANGUILHEM A FOUCAULT.
- Author
-
BILBAO, ALEJANDRO and VERMEREN, PATRICE
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL norms , *TERATOLOGY , *NORMATIVITY (Ethics) , *AUTHORS - Abstract
The present article develops an examination of the main aspects to be considered in the analysis that the philosophies of G. Canguilhem and M. Foucault devote to the problem of madness. The text stipulates the philosophical conditions of approach that both authors elaborate on to think about the problem of norms in the vital and social sphere. The question: what is crazy? then becomes the question of the social and political practices that have been developed concerning madmen and madness, evidencing the relevance that Canguilhem and Foucault give to the problem of norms, either in an ontological and/or historical-political framework of understanding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. EL YO-TADEY: MONSTRUOSIDAD DE OTRO COMENZAR EN LA LITERATURA RIOPLATENSE.
- Author
-
Viera, Marcelino
- Subjects
MODERN literature ,VIOLENCE ,LITERATURE ,POSSIBILITY ,DISCOURSE - Abstract
Copyright of Universum is the property of Instituto de Estudios Humanisticos Juan Ignacio Molina, Universidad de Talca and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The Little Trans Monster: Gender Actualization and Lady Gaga’s The Fame Monster
- Author
-
Hester, Jennessa and Ray, Mary Beth, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The Unbearable Whiteness of Get Out (2017) and Midsommar (2019)
- Author
-
Anderson, Donald L., Gregorio-Fernández, Noelia, editor, and M. Méndez-García, Carmen, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Vampires and Vampiric Entities in German Romantic Literature
- Author
-
Crawford, Heide and Bacon, Simon, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Sehnsucht und Konsum. Bone Costumes und Bonebots – Mischwesen aus Tierknochen als Verkleidung, Monster und Hybride
- Author
-
Wenzel, Käthe, Borgards, Roland, Series Editor, Fenske, Michaela, Advisory Editor, Nessel, Sabine, Advisory Editor, Rieger, Stefan, Advisory Editor, Roscher, Mieke, Advisory Editor, Ullrich, Jessica, Advisory Editor, Ullrich, Martin, Advisory Editor, and Wild, Markus, Advisory Editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Perosomus elumbus fetal monster: a rare cause of dystocia in a beetal goat - a case report from Pakistan
- Author
-
Mubbashar Hassan, Sanan Raza, Ahmad Yar Qamar, Muhammad Ilyas Naveed, Abdul Mateen, Muhammad Noman, Sayed Aun Muhammad, and Abid Hussain Shahzad
- Subjects
birth ,dystocia ,fetus ,goat ,monster ,Biotechnology ,TP248.13-248.65 ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Internal medicine ,RC31-1245 - Abstract
Dystocia, a challenging condition in obstetrics, can arise from various causes, including fetal monsters with structural abnormalities. This case report presents a unique case of dystocia due to a fetal monster known as Perosomus Elumbis in a beetal breed goat from Pakistan. The 4-years-old pregnant doe presented with prolonged straining and failure to deliver the fetus after 8 hours of labor. Upon examination, the cervix was dilated, and only the forelimbs of the fetus were visible in the birth canal. The subsequent delivery involved the application of manual traction by using a dystocia kit, and the removal of edematous fluid from the legs. The monster fetus exhibited absence of hair growth, along with the absence of thoracic vertebrae. Two other fetuses were present, with one found dead and the other alive. Post-treatment involved fluid therapy, antibiotics, and supportive care for the doe. This case report sheds light on the occurrence of Perosomus Elumbis fetal monsters and their impact on dystocia in goat breeding. Understanding the underlying causes and implementing appropriate management strategies are crucial for successful outcomes in similar cases.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. DO ANIMAL QUE FUI AO QUE UM DIA SEREI: DIÁLOGOS COM EL ANIMAL SOBRE LA PIEDRA, DE DANIELA TARAZONA.
- Author
-
de Almeida Nascimento, Naira
- Subjects
- *
PHENOMENOLOGICAL biology , *WESTERN civilization , *HUMAN body , *METAMORPHOSIS , *NINETEENTH century - Abstract
The narrative of a young woman who, after experiencing painful losses in her family, embarks on a journey into the unknown, where she undergoes a strange mutation, ultimately transforming into a reptile, is the subject of the novel El animal sobre la Piedra by Daniela Tarazona, originally published in 2008. The protagonist's metamorphosis sparks a discussion about monstrosity and normality, a split that marks our Western culture and is also the object of Michel Foucault's reflections in Abnormal. The "monster" is, for Foucault, the first of the "figures" or "circles" framed within the concept of "abnormality", an idea that gained a more precise configuration in the nineteenth century. In addition to Foucault, the concepts of facialization and living body, developed by Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, and of metamorphosis, discussed by Emanuelle Coccia and Caroline Bynum, are of interest for the proposed reading. For Emanuelle Coccia, metamorphosis is a biological phenomenon that encompasses the antecedents of both the human and the non-human. The human body, in its historical process, was once that of a primate and this, in turn, also lived other previous life forms. Thus, the present study seeks to disarticulate the opposition constructed between humans and animals, perceiving how animality has always been a negative take on the Antropocene. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Adaptive reuse for leftover urban landscape: ruins, remains, waste and monsters for an approaching genealogy of future
- Author
-
Metta, Annalisa
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Dytocia Due to Monocephalus Tetrabrachius Tetrapus Fetal Monster in a Ewe.
- Author
-
Bhat, Ghulam Rasool, Yousuf, Nahida, Singh, Pawan Preet, Gugjoo, Mudasir Bashir, Khatun, Arjuma, and Lone, Farooz Ahmad
- Subjects
VAGINAL discharge ,EWES ,DYSTOCIA - Abstract
A dystociac ewe presented with the history of continuous straining, off feed and vaginal discharge had a fetal monster-monocephalus tetrabrachius tetrapus, which was managed by cesarean operation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. La mujer kafkiana y su doble monstruoso en el gótico andino: Análisis del cuento 'Las Voladoras', de Mónica Ojeda
- Author
-
Leira Araújo-Nieto
- Subjects
franz kafka ,andean gothic ,monster ,ecuador ,Language and Literature - Abstract
Mónica Ojeda (Guayaquil, 1988) is an Ecuadorian writer whose literature is linked to the horror in its multiple forms. Furthermore, Las Voladoras (2020), included Ojeda in a new literary genre called Andean Gothic, a category where horror and Latin American myths convey. This paper analyzes how Ojeda adapts the disposition of the narrative elements to the Andean folklore. Moreover, it studies Ojeda’s reconstruction of the female monster by introducing the figure of a woman and its double, a hybrid between witch and animal, in order to create an alter ego effect. This article addresses how this narrative maneuver links Ojeda to Franz Kafka (1883–1924) and his vision of the monster in society.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Blue Öyster Cult’s 'Godzilla': An American Kaiju Anthem
- Author
-
Daniel Patrick Compora
- Subjects
Godzilla ,Blue Öyster Cult ,Spectres ,kaiju ,monster ,song ,History of scholarship and learning. The humanities ,AZ20-999 - Abstract
In 1978, the American hard rock band Blue Öyster Cult released the song “Godzilla” as the first single from the fifth studio album Spectres. Despite not registering on popular charts, it would eventually evolve into an iconic song of its era. “Godzilla” continues to receive airplay on classic rock stations, and it remains a staple of the band’s touring performances. In 2019, a cover of the song, more than forty years after its release, made its film debut in Godzilla: King of the Monsters. Though the song is primarily a tribute to the Japanese monster from which it gets its name, “Godzilla” also reflects the nuclear fear and paranoia of the 1970s Cold War era. “Godzilla’s” cultural impact, the song’s lyrics, the Cold War context in which it was written, and its connection to the kaiju films featuring the famous monster are examined. While this is the most popular and well-known song dedicated to Godzilla, it is not the only one. Other compositions have, but they have failed to achieve the iconic status that Blue Öyster Cult’s version has attained. This song has evolved into an unofficial anthem for the great monster.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The Monstrosity of Uncertainty in Richard Marsh's The Beetle.
- Author
-
Jajszczok, Justyna
- Subjects
- ENGLAND, MARSH, Richard, 1857-1915, BEETLE, The (Book : Marsh), BRANTLINGER, Patrick, ARATA, Stephen
- Abstract
The subject of this article is the Beetle, the eponymous villain from Richard Marsh's 1897 novel, whose ability to transform back and forth between human and insect and terrorise England marks them out as an exemplary monster. Read against the theoretical background of imperial Gothic, The Beetle presents monstrosity in a multiplicity of ways. In the theoretical part of the article, the foundations for explorations of monstrosity are laid in order to identify two types of impact a monster has on a person: a cognitive threat and a distorted reflection of themselves. Then follows the introduction of Stephen Arata's concept of reverse colonisation and imperial Gothic as defined by Patrick Brantlinger. In the analytical part of the article, the major themes of imperial Gothic - going native, barbaric invasion, diminished opportunities for heroics - are identified in The Beetle to show how the villain's monstrosity is manifested in them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Women and Crowds in the Novels of Elizabeth Gaskell and Margaret Harkness.
- Author
-
Ichikawa, Chieko
- Subjects
- *
CROWDS in literature , *WOMEN in literature , *FIGURES of speech - Abstract
Nineteenth-century literary representations of crowds in urban landscapes convey both the radical and revolutionary aspects of the working-class movement and the anti-modern aspects of chaos and collective violence. This article explores the entangled relationships between crowds and women from the decline of the Chartists in the late 1840s to the rise of the Socialists in the 1880s. In Elizabeth Gaskell's Mary Barton (1848) and Margaret Harkness's George Eastmont, Wanderer (1905), both narrators describe a crowd of angry rioters as the "Frankenstein-monster". This article begins by examining Gaskell's representations of her heroine and crowds in North and South, and then analyses Harkness's novels and articles while scrutinising her figurative use of the word "monster". Despite the differences in the way women's roles are represented in their novels, Gaskell and Harkness associate women's bodily actions with female political statements. This analysis of women's writing on Victorian industrial issues aims to illuminate the textuality of bodies which invites a radical reading. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Elvis en contraplano: Biopic musical, imaginarios de identidad.
- Author
-
Arango Lopera, Carlos Andrés and Rivera Betancur, Jerónimo
- Subjects
NARRATION ,STORYTELLING ,MUSICALS - Abstract
Copyright of Nexus (1900-9909) is the property of Universidad del Valle and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Catastrophism and Nature’s Revolt: Ecological Monstrosity in Popular Media Narratives / Катастрофизм и восстание природы: экологическая монструозность в нарративах популярной медиакультуры
- Author
-
VERESHCHAGINA NATALIA V. / ВЕРЕЩАГИНА Н.В. and KOMPATSIARIS PANOS / КОМПАЦИАРИС ПАНОС
- Subjects
monster ,monstrosity ,film franchise ,monsterverse ,godzilla ,king kong ,anthropocene ,posthumanism ,nuclear narrative ,ecological narrative ,ecological monster ,human ,non-human ,монстр ,монструозность ,кинофраншиза ,годзилла ,кинг конг ,антропоцен ,постгуманизм ,ядерный нарратив ,экологический нарратив ,экологический монстр ,человеческое ,нечеловеческое ,Visual arts ,N1-9211 - Abstract
This article examines the cinematic transformations of monstrosity within the context of a growing ecological awareness and the Anthropocene. The authors argue that these transformations reflect a posthumanist shift in popular culture ethics, suggesting that human nature is intertwined with the natural world, indigenous cultures should be protected, and our relationships with other beings should be nurtured. The blockbuster film franchise MonsterVerse illustrates similar shifts occurring in the portrayal of movie monsters. It creates new narratives for cinema’s most iconic monsters, the Japanese Godzilla and American King Kong. The authors analyze the types of monstrosities presented in the franchise, the narratives they are placed in, and whether the media franchise reflects posthumanist trends in contemporary culture by constructing images of monsters. In the MonsterVerse, Godzilla and American King Kong are reimagined as ecological monsters of the Anthropocene era that represent nature’s rebellion, the urgency to save the planet, and popular posthuman perspectives on ecology. MonsterVerse thus becomes one of the popular manifestations of posthuman ethics. Данная статья обращается к кинематографической трансформации монструозности в контексте нарастающего экологического сознания в эпоху антропоцена. Авторы утверждают, что описываемая трансформация является неотъемлемой частью постгуманистического поворота и шире популярных культурных этик, которые предлагают взглянуть на человеческую природу и отношения с другими с точки зрения более экологичного понимания включенности человека в мир природы, защиты культуры коренных народов и отношений с другими существами. В частности, авторы обращаются к кинофраншизе MonsterVerse, чтобы продемонстрировать сдвиги, находящие отражения в принципах создания киномонстров. MonsterVerse по-новому рассказывает истории об одних из самых популярных монстров кинематографа: японском Годзилле и американском Кинг Конге. Авторы анализируют, какие типы монструозности представлены во франшизе, в какие нарративы они помещены, и как медиафраншиза работает с постгуманистическими тенденциями современной культуры, используя образы монстров. Авторы показывают, что Годзилла и Кинг Конг перерождаются во вселенной MonsterVerse и становятся «экологическими монстрами» эпохи антропоцена, репрезентирующими восстание природы, идею сохранения планеты и популярные посгуманистические взгляды на экологию. MonsterVerse воспроизводит постчеловеческие этики в популярной форме.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Post-Zombie: Posthumanization of a Monster in Zombie Movies / Постзомби: постгуманизация монстра в современных фильмах о зомби
- Author
-
PAVLOV ALEXANDЕR V. / ПАВЛОВ А.В.
- Subjects
practical philosophy ,zombie ,monster ,posthumanism ,zombie studies ,post-zombie ,social philosophy ,biopunk ,capitalism ,representation ,практическая философия ,зомби ,монстр ,постгуманизм ,постзомби ,социальная философия ,биопанк ,капитализм ,репрезентация ,Visual arts ,N1-9211 - Abstract
Posthumanism—or, as the philosopher Francesca Ferrando calls it, the philosophy of our time—is in high demand both as a current of thought and as a theoretical tool for analyzing popular culture. The interdisciplinary field of zombie studies is also actively developing. The article proves that zombie studies are a legitimate field of humanities and social sciences. Scholars analyze zombies within the framework of sociology, ethics, neuroscience, international relations, literary studies, etc. As a theoretical tool, many of those studying zombies apply the philosophy of posthumanism. Until now, scholars have mostly been fascinated by the one zombie plot: the zombie apocalypse. However, there is another zombie-related narrative. Some call it a sentient zombie, humanizing the undead. In such a narrative, zombies are redefined, and to them the standard definition of a zombie no longer fits. A new image of the zombie can be revealed through the monster theory. The peculiar humanization of the zombie as a monster can be characterized as posthumanization. Since the classic image of the zombie in this case is redefined, we need to find a new term for the new monster. The author proposes to name the new sentient zombies post-zombies and suggests that their monstrosity should also be redefined, supporting these ideas through the analysis of Day of the Dead (1985), Warm Bodies (2013), and The Girl with All the Gifts (2016). Постгуманизм — философия нашего времени, как называет его философ Франческа Феррандо — крайне востребован и как течение мысли, и как теоретический инструмент для анализа популярной культуры. Междисциплинарная область исследований zombie studies также активно развивается. В статье доказывается, что zombie studies — легитимная область науки. Ее представители анализируют зомби в рамках социологии, этики, нейронауки, международных отношений, литературоведения и т.д. При этом многие из тех, кто изучают зомби, используют философию постгуманизма в качестве теоретического инструмента. До сих пор ученые в основном были увлечены одним нарративом о зомби — зомби-апокалипсисом. Однако автор статьи отмечает, что существует другой нарратив о зомби. Некоторые называют его «разумным зомби» — происходит гуманизация зомби. В этом нарративе зомби переопределяется, и стандартная дефиниция зомби не подходит. Для того чтобы раскрыть новый образ зомби, автор обращается к теории монстра. Так что своеобразная гуманизация зомби как монстра может быть охарактеризована как постгуманизация. Поскольку в данном случае переопределяется классический образ зомби, для нового «монстра» нам необходимо найти новый термин. Автор статьи предлагает называть новых разумных зомби «постзомби», монструозность которого тоже должна быть переопределена. Для этого автор обращается к фильмам, в которых представлен этот нарратив — «День мертвецов» (1985), «Тепло наших тел» (2013), «Новая эра Z» (2016).
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Hardware-in-the-Loop Simulations of Future Autonomous Space Systems Aided by Artificial Intelligence
- Author
-
Carbone, Andrea, Spiller, Dario, Farissi, Mohamed Salim, Sasidharan, Sarathchandrakumar T., Latorre, Francesco, Curti, Fabio, Kacprzyk, Janusz, Series Editor, Ieracitano, Cosimo, editor, Mammone, Nadia, editor, Di Clemente, Marco, editor, Mahmud, Mufti, editor, Furfaro, Roberto, editor, and Morabito, Francesco Carlo, editor
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Witches as Monsters
- Author
-
Kosmina, Brydie, Rees, Emma, Series Editor, and Kosmina, Brydie
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Morality Amid Monstrosity: The London Monster Panic, 1790
- Author
-
Hamerton, Christopher and Hamerton, Christopher
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Embodied Queer Epistemologies: A New Approach to (a Monstrous) Citizenship
- Author
-
Santos, Ana Cristina, Sümer, Sevil, Series Editor, Le Feuvre, Nicky, Series Editor, Nyhagen, Line, Series Editor, and Santos, Ana Cristina, editor
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The inhumanity of people living in Slovak Roma settlements: on the creation of the focal images.
- Author
-
Kobes, Tomáš
- Subjects
SOCIAL networks ,SUPERSTITION ,SOCIAL order ,AUTHORITARIANISM - Abstract
This text deals with convergence and divergence in relation to the formation of images of inhumanity in Slovak Roma settlements. Slovak media, social networks, and television reports often contain negative images emphasizing the Roma's backwardness, irrationality, superstition, and cruelty, and aiming to highlight their inhumanity. This approach has become prevalent even among official state authorities such as the police of the Slovak Republic, shaping the perception of the Roma as monsters. It represents a mobilization strategy that connects and disconnects various disciplinary apparatuses, forming concrete images of monsters. By examining moments of convergence and divergence, which mainly focus on the killing and consumption of canines, the text clarifies the social and material ordering that contributes to the particular arrangement of significance used by the Slovak media and other officials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Folk horror: An introduction.
- Author
-
Tolbert, Jeffrey A. and Keetley, Dawn
- Abstract
Our introduction to this Special Issue is premised on the fact that the rich critical work on folk horror has far from exhausted what can be (and needs to be) said about folk horror. There is a particular need for scholarship that extends its reach beyond Britain and for that which self-consciously interrogates, expands and complicates initial theoretical formulations of folk horror. There is a need, in short, for a 'second wave' of folk horror criticism that develops the first – that attends more specifically, for instance, to modes within folk horror (and folk horror as a mode), to the ways in which folk horror productions are rooted in particular places and regional lore, and to the ways in which those productions deploy literary, narrative, aesthetic, visual and acoustic strategies. There is also a need to identify and interrogate (in specific contexts) the key (defining) concepts of folk horror, especially the 'folk', folklore and horror – all three of which this introduction explores before it introduces the six essays in this Special Issue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Satanic Rituals in Spanish Horror Films and the Franco Dictatorship.
- Author
-
Tiburcio, Erika
- Subjects
SPANISH films ,RITES & ceremonies ,DICTATORSHIP ,RITUAL ,POLITICAL violence ,HORROR films - Abstract
Spanish horror films set in the late Franco period are a highly successful genre. However, academics have criticised its study, arguing that such films are of low quality. Nevertheless, the genre is a fundamental cultural source for understanding how fiction interacts with a society's fears as it undergoes a profound transformation. This article aims to analyse the ways rituals were represented as allegorical figures of the anxieties and conflicts in the final years of Francisco Franco's dictatorship (1968–1975). On the one hand, we will examine the three main discourses that were instrumental to the founding of monstrous cults based on gender, class and nationalism. On the other hand, we will analyse the intermingling of political violence and modernisation through the performance of rituals. Satanic rituals served as visual metaphors for a reality constructed from the Manichaean vision of Catholicism and the exclusionary nationalism of Francoism imposed through political violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The Dark Side of Energy Drinks: A Comprehensive Review of Their Impact on the Human Body.
- Author
-
Costantino, Andrea, Maiese, Aniello, Lazzari, Julia, Casula, Chiara, Turillazzi, Emanuela, Frati, Paola, and Fineschi, Vittorio
- Abstract
In recent years, the consumption of energy drinks by young adults and athletes has risen significantly, but concerns have been raised about the potential health risks associated with excessive consumption. These concerns include cardiovascular problems, nervous system disorders, and the potential for addiction. This review aims to examine the reported effects of acute or chronic abuse of energy drinks on human health. The analysis shows a significant prevalence of adverse effects, particularly on the cardiovascular and neurovegetative systems. In particular, the analysis identified nine cases of cardiac arrest, three of which were fatal. The aetiology of these adverse effects is attributed to the inherent neurostimulant properties of these beverages, of which caffeine is the predominant component. A comparison of documented effects in humans with experimental studies in animal models showed an overlap in results. This review highlights the need for greater rigour in the assessment of sudden cardiac death, particularly in young people, as legal substances such as energy drinks may be involved. We propose stricter limits on the consumption of these beverages than for caffeine, based on the evidence found and the data in the literature. This review also calls for the establishment of regulations governing the consumption of these products in view of their potential impact on human health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. The Jersey Devil: Examining a Phenomenon Obscured by Myth.
- Author
-
Thadani, Ramesh
- Subjects
- *
UNIDENTIFIED flying objects , *MYTH , *SET theory , *EXTRATERRESTRIAL beings , *FOLKLORE - Abstract
This descriptive study delves into the enigmatic nature of the “Jersey Devil,” an enduring legend of a cryptid from New Jersey (USA) while acknowledging its historical and folklore roots. The absence of tangible evidence regarding the alleged creature’s existence has often prompted explorations into metaphysical and supernatural explanations. Accordingly, three sets of theories about the creature’s origin are considered: terrestrial, interdimensional, and extraterrestrial. Events associated with the Jersey Devil compare well to, and might be linked with, documented flurries of accounts involving cryptids, UFOs, and high strangeness at alleged “paranormal” hotspots like Skinwalker Ranch in Utah and Point Pleasant in West Virginia. Caution is needed when considering esoteric theories, but the consistency of sightings over time might argue for the possibility of interdimensional or extraterrestrial entities. Finally, the paper discusses the notion of the Jersey Devil phenomenon serving as a control mechanism or a means of instilling fear of the unknown. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Goliath's Humanimal Body: Masculinity, Ethnicity, and Animal Imagery in 1 Samuel 17.
- Author
-
Millar, Suzanna
- Subjects
- *
SEA monsters , *MASCULINITY , *HEGEMONY , *IDEOLOGY - Abstract
In 1 Samuel 17, Goliath is described using animal imagery, depicted like a sea creature, a lion and bear, a dog, and scavengers' prey. I argue that these images present Goliath as not fully human, and contribute to the construction of his masculinity and ethnicity. This article traces the following trajectory: masculinity is established then undermined; the foreigner encroaches then is expelled. Goliath is introduced as a hypermasculine ultrapredator. Akin to a sea monster from the chaotic beyond, he has an exoskeleton of fish-scale armour (17:5). David then likens Goliath to lions and bears (17:34–37), imperial symbols for fearsome foreign nations. David, though, can grasp their beards (overturning their masculinity) and slay them. Goliath perceives David to be treating him like a scavenging dog (17:43)—a dishonorable creature encroaching where it does not belong. Consequently, the opponents threaten to give the other's flesh to the birds and beasts (17:44, 46). Their bodies' masculine wholeness is disarticulated by scavengers and expelled from society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Where is Dracula? Unraveling Geographic Ambiguity in Dracula and Carmilla
- Author
-
Franco Flores, Rafael Jesus
- Subjects
Literature ,19th-century ,British Literature ,Geography ,Gothic ,Monster ,Queer Studies - Abstract
In Victorian monster fiction, monsters are not bound by western cartography. Subsequently, western people imagine monsters’ locality as contrasted with the geographic fixity of western cities such as London and Berlin. In doing so, western people imagine non-western geography solely in western terms. This approach to maps creates a geographic erasure of non-western cultures from cartography altogether. In doing so, not only does it make the monsters feared for their mysterious whereabouts and “otherness,” but it geographically erases the monsters’ existence from the western eye. This thesis explores the implications of monsters’ geographic non-representation in western cartography, specifically in terms of violence as a result of geographic erasure. I argue that monsters’ geographic erasure rids him of subjectivity in the eyes of the west, for they are portrayed as already dead, per their absence from western maps.
- Published
- 2024
37. Facades of Ingress
- Author
-
Berardi, Kristopher
- Subjects
Disability studies ,Accessibility ,accommodations ,chronic illness ,game studies ,Interactive experience ,Monster - Abstract
Facades of Ingress is an interactive puzzle-based experience revealing the monster that lies at the center of the institution. It holds the power to grant accommodations that make crip lives easier inside institutions. Instead, it is greedy. It creates complex systems of paperwork, deeply intrusive medical exams, and copious layers of bureaucracy to hold hostage the resources it hoards.This paper looks at the theoretical concepts that helped shape Facades of Ingress. Using disability and monster theory, it examines the societal structures and systems that have failed crips, preventing them from gaining accommodations inside institutions. It looks at work by disability scholars and artists, such as Mimi Khúc’s Open in Emergency and Johanna Hedva’s “Sick Woman Theory.” It also examines how disability is seen as monstrosity through an analysis of Matt Fraser’s Born Freak and uses the social model of disability studies to prove that the real monster is the societal systems that affect disabled bodyminds’ abilities to exist.
- Published
- 2024
38. My Words to Lulu10tacles Deep Below the Sea: Monstrous Multitudes & Digital Trans Embodiments
- Author
-
Schaffer, Max
- Subjects
Music ,Gender studies ,Performing arts ,autotune ,avatar ,hyperpop ,monster ,transgender ,vocaloid - Abstract
Through creative and analytical exploration with/as my collaborator/avatar Lulu10tacles, a Vocaloid artist and synthetic being, we discuss and demonstrate current practices of digital trans embodiment & vocal modulation in digital communities. Virtual manifestations can act as powerful lenses through which to re-conceptualize relations to one’s own body, renegotiating boundaries of the self in both beautifully profound and deeply discomforting ways. Placing topics of race, gender, and capital at the center of discourse regarding digital curation and space-making, we trace threads of musical ancestry that show digital curation as a crucial technology of survival across time & space. In exploring practices in which the separation between self & other are fractured, we investigate what methods can be deployed in the always-online world to realize trans futurist politics in the present.
- Published
- 2024
39. Monstres et images : le médium photographique face au corps anormal
- Author
-
Anna Maria Sienicka
- Subjects
monster ,freakshow ,witkin ,arbus ,photography ,Fine Arts - Abstract
This article explores the relationship between photography and monstrosity, focusing on the specific perceptual experience of encountering a "monster" and the way in which this experience was transcribed by the photographic medium. Using both medical and freakshow photography, we'll examine the ways in which the "monster" was represented, and the views these images convey. Through the analysis of several photographs of "monsters", the text will show how photography constructed the visibility of the body, according to a normative framework that conferred a legible character on the monstrous body, a condition of its visibility. If photography became an ally of the dehumanizing practices surrounding the development of the freak figure, can it, after the decline of exhibitions of the "abnormal", reclaim them and propose a different approach to the monstrous body? This question will be explored through the photographs of Diane Arbus and Joel-Peter Witkin, two "photographers of freaks".
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. From forbidden configurations to a classification of some axial algebras of Monster type.
- Author
-
M c Inroy, J. and Shpectorov, S.
- Subjects
- *
GROUP algebras , *ALGEBRA , *NONASSOCIATIVE algebras - Abstract
Ivanov introduced the shape of a Majorana algebra as a record of the 2-generated subalgebras arising in that algebra. As a broad generalisation of this concept and to free it from the ambient algebra, we introduce the concept of an axet and shapes on an axet. A shape can be viewed as an algebra version of a group amalgam. Just like an amalgam, a shape leads to a unique algebra completion which may be non-trivial or it may collapse. Then for a natural family of shapes of generalised Monster type we classify all completion algebras and discover that a great majority of them collapse, confirming the observations made in an earlier paper [12]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. La mujer kafkiana y su doble monstruoso en el gótico andino: Análisis del cuento "Las Voladoras", de Mónica Ojeda.
- Author
-
Araújo-Nieto, Leira
- Abstract
Mónica Ojeda (Guayaquil, 1988) is an Ecuadorian writer whose literature is linked to the horror in its multiple forms. Furthermore, Las Voladoras (2020), included Ojeda in a new literary genre called Andean Gothic, a category where horror and Latin American myths convey. This paper analyzes how Ojeda adapts the disposition of the narrative elements to the Andean folklore. Moreover, it studies Ojeda's reconstruction of the female monster by introducing the figure of a woman and its double, a hybrid between witch and animal, in order to create an alter ego effect. This article addresses how this narrative maneuver links Ojeda to Franz Kafka (1883-1924) and his vision of the monster in society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. 'What if it's Not a Ship?': Reading the Monster Octopus in Jordan Peele's Nope.
- Author
-
Bride, Amy
- Subjects
- *
CAPITALISM , *POLITICAL cartoons , *ECONOMIC man , *BLACK humor , *RACISM - Abstract
The article argues that the alien monster of Jordan Peele's Nope (2022) should be read as part of the long legacy of capitalist monster octopuses, and that identification and recognition of the monster octopus in this context allows for a greater understanding of Peele's specifically gothic critique of capitalism within the film. The article reviews the history of the monster octopus in literature, art, cinema, and political cartoon, outlines Nope's relationship to and development of these earlier texts, and then examines how the film uses the monster octopus to highlight capitalism as a monstrous system that we can neither survive nor afford to look away from. Critical perspectives explored in the article include Gothic Studies, Financial History, and Critical Race Theory, and Nope is examined as an example of the Economic Humanities in contemporary horror cinema. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Monstrosity - Illness - Wound Uncanny Interconnections in Deborah Levy's Hot Milk.
- Author
-
Kisiel, Anna
- Abstract
Copyright of Er(r)go: Teoria, Literatura, Kultura is the property of Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Slaskiego and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Why look at dead animals?
- Author
-
Coughlin, Maura
- Abstract
Lion Attacking a Dromedary was a sensational object for its first viewers at the Paris Universal Exposition in 1867. As an entity or thing, it provoked a powerfully visceral response and, as the current essay explores, it remains a difficult object to view or display today. As we now know, the Verreaux brothers embedded human remains in the figure of the rider that had formerly been assumed to be just a clothed mannequin. (I have elected to exclude any image of this controversial diorama containing human and other animal remains because it is not necessary for this theoretical inquiry). This essay suggests that theoretical tools derived from Material Ecocriticism and Monster Theory that may help us to think about, or alongside, the affective power of this disturbing taxidermy assemblage, ever aware that this piece draws its power from the theatrical, colonial violence of extraction and extinction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Revealing the Unrevealed: An Investigation of Gothic Marxism in Ayesha Muzaffar's Jinnistan.
- Author
-
Mahmood, Warisha, Abbas, Warda, and Rehman, Fizza
- Subjects
MARXIST philosophy ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RADICALISM ,ISLAM - Abstract
The research paper dissects the major characters along with their encounters with the ghosts in their daily life routine revealing the unrevealed political cards behind their narration endeavoring to achieve the utilitarian cause of contemporary Pakistani horror literature. Capitalism being an immortal malice has its own set of traumas attached to it and any revolution beyond that is believed to have its own kind of traumatic risks. The theory of 'Gothic Marxism' has been kept under scrutiny to sketch the fears aroused after apprehending the unconsciousness of capitalism which plagues a society through a particular cultural expression. All these dilemmas being clearly witnessed in the ideologies of laymen by anatomizing the genre of horror fiction depict the blind following of the unauthentic beliefs and cultural superstitions, leading the proletariats being processed into the corporeal fragility of capitalism. The cause ultimately compels to capture an aesthetic capacity along with a culturally therapeutic effect in the selected short stories of Abu's Jinn by Ayesha Muzaffar, through colossal fears engraved into cultural imaginations, on a mass level and their shift resonating with anxieties of rapid economic development historically. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. ERRORES INFORMÁTICOS Y DISPOSITIVOS DEL HORROR. MONSTRUOSIDADES DE LO DIGITAL EN VIDEOFILIA Y OTROS SÍNDROMES VIRALES (2015) Y UNCANNY VALLEY (2015).
- Author
-
González Dinamarca, Rodrigo and Gordillo, Camila
- Subjects
DIGITAL technology ,ANXIETY ,HORROR ,SHORT films ,SUBJECTIVITY - Abstract
Copyright of Universum is the property of Instituto de Estudios Humanisticos Juan Ignacio Molina, Universidad de Talca and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Jaws, anthropocentrism and cinema as a monster-making machine.
- Author
-
Mills, Brett
- Subjects
ANTHROPOCENTRISM ,MOTION picture audiences ,JAWS ,FILM adaptations ,SHARKS - Abstract
Jaws (Spielberg 1975) is a film in which a shark is depicted as a monster. Readings and analyses of the film routinely describe the shark as a monster, and pleasures associated with the film rest on audiences reading the animal as such. The book the film is adapted from constructs the shark in similar ways, but there are notable differences between the two. This article examines how the film constructs the shark as a monster, with particular reference to differences between the book and film. It focuses specifically on the story-telling and representational norms associated with each medium, indicating how cinema's centring of the audio-visual is fundamental to its monster-making processes. Drawing on work from the 'animal turn' this article demonstrates cinema's embedded anthropocentrism and points to the implications this has for non-humans outside of cinema. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Is the Idiot a Monster?
- Author
-
Spill, Frédérique, author and Gharibian, Arby, translator
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Die Sonnenbrille zur Mystifizierung und Enthüllung im Film
- Author
-
Zaporozhets, Maryna, Bulgakowa, Oksana, editor, and Mauer, Roman, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Things to come. Dinge im Science-Fiction-Film
- Author
-
Spiegel, Simon, Bulgakowa, Oksana, editor, and Mauer, Roman, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.