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"It Came From the 1950s" is an eclectic, witty and insightful
collection of essays predicated on the hypothesis that popular
cultural documents provide unique insights into the concerns,
anxieties and desires of their times. The essays explore the
emergence of "Hammer Horror" and the company's groundbreaking 1958
adaptation of "Dracula"; the work of popular authors such as
Shirley Jackson and Robert Bloch, and the effect that 50s food
advertisements had upon the poetry of Sylvia Plath; the place of
special effects in the decade's science fiction films; and 1950s
Anglo-American relations as refracted through the prism of the 1957
film "Night of the Demon."
This book offers a one-volume study of Jane Austen that is both a
sophisticated critical introduction and a valuable contribution to
the study of one of the most popular and enduring British
novelists. Darryl Jones provides students with a coherent overview
of Austen's work and an idea of the current state of critical
debate.
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The Sign of the Four (Paperback)
Arthur Conan Doyle; Edited by Caroline Reitz; Edited by (general) Darryl Jones
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R165
Discovery Miles 1 650
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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'I crave for mental exaltation. That is why I have chosen my own
particular profession, or rather created it, for I am the only one
in the world.' Mary Morstan receives a large pearl through the post
once a year without any clue as to the sender. When her intriguing
correspondent requests a meeting, Holmes and Watson take on the
case. Together the trio race through London to uncover the secrets
of the Sholto family, who hold the key to uncovering the
whereabouts of Mary's father and the existence of a treasure
stemming from a crime committed years ago in India. The Sign of the
Four has been a crucial part of the Sherlock Holmes canon since its
first publication in 1890. It explores theft, betrayal, and murder
in the larger context of the British Empire at a time of national
upheaval, and the novel's flashbacks to India during the 'Mutiny'
and its aftermath call into question the consequences of that
imperial venture. Caroline Reitz's new introduction and notes draws
attention to some often-overlooked context of the story, such as
its original publication in Lippincott's Monthly Magazine, its
representation of imperial violence, and changing gender roles.
ABOUT THE SERIES: For over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has
made available the widest range of literature from around the
globe. Each affordable volume reflects Oxford's commitment to
scholarship, providing the most accurate text plus a wealth of
other valuable features, including expert introductions by leading
authorities, helpful notes to clarify the text, up-to-date
bibliographies for further study, and much more.
Arthur Conan Doyle famously killed off Sherlock Holmes in 1893, in
the short story 'The Final Problem', but was tempted to bring him
back to life ten years later, in the thirteen tales that comprise
The Return of Sherlock Holmes. While the outcry that supposedly
followed Holmes' death was mostly apocryphal (the claim that
readers wore black armbands in mourning has been frequently cited
but never actually proved), by 1893 there was a substantial
readership for Holmes' two series of adventures published in the
Strand Magazine and two earlier novels. Doyle returned to Holmes in
1901-2 with The Hound of the Baskervilles, a novel set before the
events of 'The Final Problem'; the commercial success of the
serialisation in the Strand led Doyle to consider reviving the
Holmes stories on a longer-term basis. Accordingly, in 1903 Doyle
was contracted by the American magazine Collier's Weekly to supply
six more Holmes stories; the agreement was extended to six more,
with a final extension for a thirteenth story ('The Second Stain')
that Doyle (mistakenly) believed to be the closing episode of the
Holmes adventures. These thirteen tales make up this volume.
"I never can resist a touch of the dramatic." The Memoirs of
Sherlock Holmes is now best remembered for its concluding story in
which the great detective appears to plunge to his death into the
waters at the bottom of the Reichenbach Falls, locked in a struggle
with his nemesis, Professor Moriarty. However, the collection also
brings the reader back to the beginnings of Holmes' career,
involving a mutiny at sea and a treasure hunt in a Sussex country
house, and a first encounter with Holmes' older brother Mycroft, of
whom Holmes says, "If the art of the detective began and ended in
reasoning from any armchair, my brother would be the greatest
criminal agent that ever lived". This collection includes some of
the detective's greatest cases, such as 'Silver Blaze' and 'The
Naval Treaty', and even one case which Holmes fails to solve.
Edited with an introduction by Jarlath Killeen, this volume
examines Holmes as a safeguard against social breakdown and chaos,
as well as an agent of justice and goodness against the forces of
evil. It also situates the collection in the growth of life writing
in the period, and explores the ways in which Holmes became
increasingly 'real' to readers as more details about his
personality and biography are revealed in the stories. ABOUT THE
SERIES: For over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has made
available the widest range of literature from around the globe.
Each affordable volume reflects Oxford's commitment to scholarship,
providing the most accurate text plus a wealth of other valuable
features, including expert introductions by leading authorities,
helpful notes to clarify the text, up-to-date bibliographies for
further study, and much more.
'I was conscious of a most horrible smell of mould, and of a cold
kind of face pressed against my own...' Considered by many to be
the most terrifying writer in English, M. R. James was an eminent
scholar who spent his entire adult life in the academic
surroundings of Eton and Cambridge. His classic supernatural tales
draw on the terrors of the everyday, in which documents and objects
unleash terrible forces, often in closed rooms and night-time
settings where imagination runs riot. Lonely country houses, remote
inns, ancient churches or the manuscript collections of great
libraries provide settings for unbearable menace, from creatures
seeking retribution and harm. These stories have lost none of their
power to unsettle and disturb. This edition presents all of James's
published ghost stories, including the unforgettable 'Oh, Whistle
and I'll Come to You, My Lad' and 'Casting the Runes', and an
appendix of James's writings on the ghost story. Darryl Jones's
introduction and notes provide a fascinating insight into James's
background and his mastery of the genre he made his own. ABOUT THE
SERIES: For over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has made
available the widest range of literature from around the globe.
Each affordable volume reflects Oxford's commitment to scholarship,
providing the most accurate text plus a wealth of other valuable
features, including expert introductions by leading authorities,
helpful notes to clarify the text, up-to-date bibliographies for
further study, and much more.
'There's the scarlet thread of murder running through the
colourless skein of life.' In Arthur Conan Doyle's A Study in
Scarlet a popular cultural phenomenon is born. We meet two of the
most famous characters in modern literary history: the consulting
detective Sherlock Holmes and John Watson, an army doctor home on
sick leave, for the first time. Through Watson we learn a little
about the eccentric figure who is his new room-mate at 221B Baker
Street, before they encounter their first case: an American visitor
to the city has been killed in an empty house off the Brixton Road,
and the only clue the police have is the mysterious word 'Rache',
scrawled in blood-red letters on the wall. As Holmes sets to work
with his unique forensic methods, behind the murder a tangled skein
of love, religion, and revenge gradually unwinds, taking us from
the streets of London to the Utah Territory, and back again. As
Nicholas Daly's Introduction describes, out of this gripping tale
grew the Holmes and Watson stories that would make Conan Doyle the
best-paid author of his time. His creations have become household
words, inspiring not only countless adaptations and imitations, but
a Sherlock Holmes museum, Sherlock Holmes-themed pubs, and a whole
array of Holmesian merchandise, from cushions to jigsaw puzzles.
Here, though, we meet Holmes and Watson before they became famous,
and we can see how their extraordinary impact on our popular
culture derives from the late-Victorian world from which they
emerge.
Very Short Introductions: Brilliant, Sharp, Inspiring Four o'clock
in the morning, and the lights are on and still there's no way
we're going to sleep, not after the film we just saw. The book we
just read. Fear is one of the most primal human emotions, and one
of the hardest to reason with and dispel. So why do we scare
ourselves? It seems almost mad that we would frighten ourselves for
fun, and yet there are thousands of books, films, games, and other
forms of entertainment designed to do exactly that. As Darryl Jones
shows, the horror genre is huge. Ranging from vampires, ghosts, and
werewolves to mad scientists, Satanists, and deranged serial
killers, the cathartic release of scaring ourselves has made its
appearance in everything from Shakespearean tragedies to internet
memes. Exploring the key tropes of the genre, including its
monsters, its psychological chills, and its love affair with the
macabre, this Very Short Introduction discusses why horror stories
disturb us, and how society responds to literary and film
representations of the gruesome and taboo. Should the enjoyment of
horror be regarded with suspicion? Are there different levels of
the horrific, and should we distinguish between the commonly
reviled carnage of contemporary torture porn and the culturally
acceptable bloodbaths of ancient Greek tragedies? Analysing the way
in which horror manifests multiple personalities, and has been used
throughout history to articulate the fears and taboos of the
current generation, Darryl Jones considers the continuing evolution
of the genre today. As horror is mass marketed to mainstream
society in the form of romantic vampires and blockbuster hits, it
also continues to maintain its former shadowy presence on the edges
of respectability, as banned films and violent internet phenomena
push us to question both our own preconceptions and the terrifying
capacity of human nature. ABOUT THE SERIES: The Very Short
Introductions series from Oxford University Press contains hundreds
of titles in almost every subject area. These pocket-sized books
are the perfect way to get ahead in a new subject quickly. Our
expert authors combine facts, analysis, perspective, new ideas, and
enthusiasm to make interesting and challenging topics highly
readable. First published in hardback as Sleeping with the Lights
on.
'Mr Holmes, they were the footprints of a gigantic hound!' The
mysterious death of Sir Charles Baskerville brings Sherlock Holmes
and Dr Watson to Dartmoor in the most famous of all of Arthur Conan
Doyle's books. Is Sir Charles the latest victim of the ancestral
Curse of the Baskervilles, which summons a demonic hound to stalk
the moor and exact vengeance for a past misdeed, or is there a more
modern, more prosaic explanation for the sudden death? In The Hound
of the Baskervilles, the modern, rational world, and the ancient,
supernatural world collide in the novel which brought Sherlock
Holmes back from the dead. This new edition of Conan Doyle's
classic mystery is part of a series of new editions of the Sherlock
Holmes stories published in Oxford World's Classics. Darryl Jones's
Introduction explores the competing worlds of the supernatural and
the scientific in the novel and in Arthur Conan Doyle's life, the
novel's colonial background and origins, and the role of landscape,
folklore, and folk horror in the novel.
'Cities, nations, civilization, progress-it's all over. That game's
up. We're beat.' One of the most important and influential invasion
narratives ever written, The War of the Worlds (1897) describes the
coming of the Martians, who land in Woking, and make their way
remorselessly towards the capital, wreaking chaos, death, and
destruction. The novel is closely associated with anxiety about a
possible invasion of Great Britain at the turn of the century, and
concerns about imperial expansion and its impact, and it drew on
the latest astronomical knowledge to imagine a desert planet, Mars,
turning to Earth for its future. The Martians are also
evolutionarily superior to mankind.
The modern horror story grew and developed across the nineteenth
century, embracing categories as diverse as ghost stories, the
supernatural and psychological horror, medical and scientific
horror, colonial horror, and tales of the uncanny and precognition.
This anthology brings together twenty-nine of the greatest horror
stories of the period, from 1816 to 1912, from the British, Irish,
American, and European traditions. It ranges widely across the
sub-genres to encompass authors whose terror-inducing powers remain
unsurpassed. The book includes stories by some of the best writers
of the century - Hoffmann, Poe, Balzac, Dickens, Hawthorne,
Melville, and Zola - as well as established genre classics from M.
R. James, Arthur Machen, Bram Stoker, Algernon Blackwood, Charlotte
Perkins Gilman, and others. It includes rare and little-known
pieces by writers such as William Maginn, Francis Marion Crawford,
W. F. Harvey, and William Hope Hodgson, and shows the important
role played by periodicals in popularizing the horror story.
Wherever possible, stories are reprinted in their first published
form, with background information about their authors and helpful,
contextualizing annotation. Darryl Jones's lively introduction
discusses horror's literary evolution and its articulation of
cultural preoccupations and anxieties. These are stories guaranteed
to freeze the blood, revolt the senses, and keep you awake at
night: prepare to be terrified!
Four o'clock in the morning, and the lights are on and still
there's no way we're going to sleep, not after the film we just
saw. The book we just read. Fear is one of the most primal human
emotions, and one of the hardest to reason with and dispel. So why
do we scare ourselves? It seems almost mad that we would frighten
ourselves for fun, and yet there are thousands of books, films,
games, and other forms of entertainment designed to do exactly
that. As Darryl Jones shows, the horror genre is huge. Ranging from
vampires, ghosts, and werewolves to mad scientists, Satanists, and
deranged serial killers, the cathartic release of scaring ourselves
has made its appearance in everything from Shakespearean tragedies
to internet memes. Exploring the key tropes of the genre, including
its monsters, its psychological chills, and its love affair with
the macabre, Darryl Jones discusses why horror stories disturb us,
and how society responds to literary and film representations of
the gruesome and taboo. Should the enjoyment of horror be regarded
with suspicion? Are there different levels of the horrific, and
should we distinguish between the commonly reviled carnage of
contemporary torture porn and the culturally acceptable bloodbaths
of ancient Greek tragedies? Analysing the way in which horror
manifests multiple personalities, and has been used throughout
history to articulate the fears and taboos of the current
generation, Jones considers the continuing evolution of the genre
today. As horror is mass marketed to mainstream society in the form
of romantic vampires and blockbuster hits, it also continues to
maintain its former shadowy presence on the edges of
respectability, as banned films and violent internet phenomena push
us to question both our own preconceptions and the terrifying
capacity of human nature.
'I was conscious of a most horrible smell of mould, and of a cold
kind of face pressed against my own...' Considered by many to be
the most terrifying writer in English, M. R. James was an eminent
scholar who spent his entire adult life in the academic
surroundings of Eton and Cambridge. His classic supernatural tales
draw on the terrors of the everyday, in which documents and objects
unleash terrible forces, often in closed rooms and night-time
settings where imagination runs riot. Lonely country houses, remote
inns, ancient churches or the manuscript collections of great
libraries provide settings for unbearable menace, from creatures
seeking retribution and harm. These stories have lost none of their
power to unsettle and disturb. This edition presents all of James's
published ghost stories, including the unforgettable 'Oh, Whistle
and I'll Come to You, My Lad' and 'Casting the Runes', and an
appendix of James's writings on the ghost story. Darryl Jones's
introduction and notes provide a fascinating insight into James's
background and his mastery of the genre he made his own.
An eclectic and insightful collection of essays predicated on the
hypothesis that popular cultural documents provide unique insights
into the concerns, anxieties and desires of their times. 1950s
popular culture is analysed by leading scholars and critics such as
Christopher Frayling, Mark Jancovich, Kim Newman and David J. Skal.
'The creatures I had seen were not men, had never been men. They
were animals, humanised animals...' A shipwrecked Edward Prendick
finds himself stranded on a remote Noble island, the guest of a
notorious scientist, Doctor Moreau. Disturbed by the cries of
animals in pain, and by his encounters with half-bestial creatures,
Edward slowly realises his danger and the extremes of the Doctor's
experiments. Saturated in pain and disgust, suffused with grotesque
and often unbearable images of torture and bodily mutilation, The
Island of Doctor Moreau is unquestionably a shocking novel. It is
also a serious, and highly knowledgeable, philosophical engagement
with Wells's times, with their climate of scientific openness and
advancement, but also their anxieties about the ethical nature of
scientific discoveries, and their implications for religion. Darryl
Jones's introduction places the book in both its scientific and
literary context; with the Origin of Species and Gulliver's
Travels, and argues that The Island of Doctor Moreau is, like all
of Wells's best fiction, is fundamentally a novel of ideas
Robert Emmet's life, death, and immediate elevation into the
pantheon of Irish nationalist heroes are well known. These essays
on Emmet's life and legacy, however, demonstrate a new
interdisciplinary approach to studies of the Irish nationalist
hero. "Reinventing Emmet" includes essays on commemoration,
literature, legal history and aspects of the Emmet legacy not
explored elsewhere, such as studies of his influence on American
culture, and draws on research from young as well as established
scholars. Robert Emmet is an Irish (and Irish-American) nationalist
icon. Although Emmet's rebellion of 1803 was an embarrassing
failure, his speech from the dock prior to his execution for high
treason has captured national and international imagination. The
trial, the speech, and the image of Emmet have in many ways
superseded his actual achievements, and have been perpetually
reproduced across the nineteenth and twentieth centuries,
culminating in the bicentenary of Emmet's rebellion in 2003. But
what is Emmet's legacy? Is there more to this iconic figure than a
failed rebellion and a memorable speech?
A Clouded Leopard in the Middle of the Road is an eye-opening
introduction to the ecological impacts of roads. Drawing on over
ten years of active engagement in the field of road ecology, Darryl
Jones sheds light on the challenges roads pose to wildlife—and
the solutions taken to address them. One of the most ubiquitous
indicators of human activity, roads typically promise development
and prosperity. Yet they carry with them the threat of disruption
to both human and animal lives. Jones surveys the myriad,
innovative ways stakeholders across the world have sought to reduce
animal-vehicle collisions and minimize road-crossing risks for
wildlife, including efforts undertaken at the famed fauna
overpasses of Banff National Park, the Singapore Eco-Link, "tunnels
of love" in the Australian Alps, and others. Along the way, he
acquaints readers with concepts and research in road ecology,
describing the field's origins and future directions. Engaging and
accessible, A Clouded Leopard in the Middle of the Road brings to
the foreground an often-overlooked facet of humanity's footprint on
earth.
Darryl Jones is fascinated by bird feeders. Not the containers
supplying food to our winged friends, but the people who fill the
containers. Why do people do this? Jones asks in The Birds at My
Table. Does the food even benefit the birds? What are the
unintended consequences of providing additional food to our winged
friends? Jones takes us on a wild flight through the history of
bird feeding. He pinpoints the highs and lows of the practice. And
he ponders this odd but seriously popular form of interaction
between humans and wild animals. Most important, he points out that
we know very little about the impact of feeding birds despite
millions of people doing it every day. Unerringly, Jones digs at
the deeper issues and questions, and he raises our awareness of the
things we don’t yet know and why we really should. Using the
latest scientific findings, The Birds at My Table takes a global
swoop from 30,000 feet down to the backyard bird feeder and pushes
our understanding of the many aspects of bird feeding back up to
new heights.
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Gothic Tales (Paperback)
Arthur Conan Doyle; Edited by Darryl Jones
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R407
R351
Discovery Miles 3 510
Save R56 (14%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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'There was a rumour, too, that he was a devil-worshipper, or
something of that sort, and also that he had the evil eye...'
Arthur Conan Doyle was the greatest genre writer Britain has ever
produced. Throughout a long writing career, he drew on his own
medical background, his travels, and his increasing interest in
spiritualism and the occult to produce a spectacular array of
Gothic Tales. Many of Doyle's writings are recognised as the very
greatest tales of terror. They range from hauntings in the polar
wasteland to evil surgeons and malevolent jungle landscapes. This
collection brings together over thirty of Conan Doyle's best Gothic
Tales. Darryl Jones's introduction discusses the contradictions in
Conan Doyle's very public life - as a medical doctor who became
obsessed with the spirit world, or a British imperialist drawn to
support Irish Home Rule - and shows the ways in which these found
articulation in that most anxious of all literary forms, the
Gothic.
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