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Full Description
Monsters have always swarmed around the frontiers of colonialism and capitalism, from Europe's invasion and occupation of the Americas to the planetary emergency of the present day. In this volume, we discover how the early British Gothic - far from a progenitor - is in fact a belated cultural response to capitalist modernity, one anticipated by myriad spectres haunting the plantations of the 'New World'. Gothic did not begin in Britain, and then become global over time. Rather, as the volume reveals, gothic has always been world-gothic: a way of dealing with the alienation and anxiety that erupt with capitalist modernisation, when- and wherever this is taking place. Essays in the volume chart the new links and comparisons enabled by this insight, renovating established gothic concepts and outlining groundbreaking new theoretical infrastructure. Together, chapters provincialise the 'western' gothic tradition, in order to open up new possibilities for world-gothic reading.
Contents
Introduction: Five Hundred Years of World-Gothic Rebecca Duncan and Rebekah Cumpsty; Part I. Gothic in the World: (Re)Conceptualisations; 1. The undead's capitalist world-system Stephen Shapiro; 2. Whiteness and the 'Western' Gothic tradition Rebecca Duncan and Johan Höglund; 3. Gothic and Labour: metabolic, reproductive, international Esthie Hugo; Part II. World-Monsters: Global Transmissions and Genealogies; 4. Pre-colonial Gothic and the Windigo Krista Collier-Jarvis; 5. Hauntings: African-based spirituality in world-Gothic literature James Mellis; 6. Vampiric exhaustion and extractive form: the Mozambican miner Thomas Waller; 7. Subversive sorcery and reparative witchcraft: Huesera's challenges to coloniality Valeria Villegas Lindvall; Part III. Worlding Gothic Theory: 8. World-Gothic and the sublime Jana M. Giles; 9. A planetary grotesque Rune Graulund;10. Uncanny animism: reframing the world-Gothic with Amos Tutuola Ryan Topper; 11. Abject/Abhuman/Human: provincializing world-Gothic monstrosity Rebekah Cumpsty; Part IV. World-Gothic: transregional comparisons; 12. Gothic inheritances in Oceania: problems of origins and ownership Caitlin Vandertop; 13. Tough oil Gothic: contemporary petrofiction across the North-South divide Karl Emil Rosenbæk Reetz; 14. Scheherazade and Bluebeard: the world-Gothic and bloody chambers in Arab women's writing Roxanne Douglas; 15. Coda: catachresis and the politics of Gothic naming Rebekah Cumpsty and Rebecca Duncan.