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Gender, Supernatural Beings, and the Liminality of Death: Monstrous
Males/Fatal Females examines representations of the supernatural
dead to demonstrate shifts in the manifestation of gender.
Including readings of East Asian detectives/cyborgs, Iranian
vampires, and African zombies, among others, This collection offers
a multi-faceted look at myth, legend, and popular culture
representations of the gendered supernatural from a broad range of
international contexts. The contributors show that, as creatures
pass through the liminal space of death, their new supernatural
forms challenge cultural conceptions of gender, masculinity, and
femininity.
Taking a broad interpretation of "supernatural" to include anything
beyond nature, Global Perspectives on the Liminality of the
Supernatural examines the liminality of often-overlooked types of
supernatural beings in light of the themes of death and gender. It
gives the reader a tour of the continents and takes them out into
space, looking at popular culture and mythologies to propose
answers to fundamental anthropological questions about humanity,
the concept of "dead," and how we relate to our own genders when
using the supernatural to understand them.
Gender, Supernatural Beings, and the Liminality of Death: Monstrous
Males/Fatal Females examines representations of the supernatural
dead to demonstrate shifts in the manifestation of gender.
Including readings of East Asian detectives/cyborgs, Iranian
vampires, and African zombies, among others, This collection offers
a multi-faceted look at myth, legend, and popular culture
representations of the gendered supernatural from a broad range of
international contexts. The contributors show that, as creatures
pass through the liminal space of death, their new supernatural
forms challenge cultural conceptions of gender, masculinity, and
femininity.
This book examines how science fiction's portrayal of humanity's
desire for robotic companions influences and reflects changes in
our actual desires. It begins by taking the reader on a journey
that outlines basic human desires-in short, we are storytellers,
and we need the objects of our desire to be able to mirror that
aspect of our beings. This not only explains the reasons we seek
out differences in our mates, but also why we crave sex and romance
with robots. In creating a new species of potential companions,
science fiction highlights what we already want and how our desires
dictate-and are in return recreated- by what is written. But sex
with robots is more than a sci-fi pop-culture phenomenon; it's a
driving force in the latest technological advances in cybernetic
science. As such, this book looks at both what we imagine and what
we can create in terms of the newest iterations of robotic
companionship.
Unpacking assumptions about corseting, Rebecca Gibson supplements
narratives of corseted women from the 18th and 19th centuries with
her seminal work on corset-related skeletal deformation. An
undergarment that provided support and shape for centuries, the
corset occupies a familiar but exotic space in modern
consciousness, created by two sometimes contradictory narrative
arcs: the texts that women wrote regarding their own corseting
experiences and the recorded opinions of the medical community
during the 19th century. Combining these texts with skeletal age
data and rib and vertebrae measurements from remains at St. Bride's
parish London dating from 1700 to 1900, the author discusses
corseting in terms of health and longevity, situates corseting as
an everyday practice that crossed urban socio-economic boundaries,
and attests to the practice as part of normal female life during
the time period Gibson's bioarchaeology of binding is is the first
large-scalar, multi-site bioethnography of the corseted woman.
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