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Guide to the Gothic III
Frederick S. Frank
€ 469.79
FREE Delivery in Ireland
Description for Guide to the Gothic III
Hardback. Num Pages: 1232 pages. BIC Classification: DSK; GBCR. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 222 x 154 x 74. Weight in Grams: 1693.
A cumulative supplement to Guide to the Gothic (Scarecrow Press, 1984) and Guide to the Gothic II (Scarecrow Press, 1995), Guide to the Gothic III offers researchers and students at any level a comprehensive bibliographical survey of Gothic scholarship and criticism of the 20th and 21st centuries. Over 1,600 new annotated entries covering 1993-2003 are included, along with 4,055 shortened entries from the previous two volumes. New individual author studies on Anne Rice and Angela Carter are included, as well as special sections on Gothic Chapbooks, Bluebooks, and Shilling Shockers, Pre-Gothicism and Graveyard Verse, Classical English Authors and the Gothic, Gothic Revival Architecture, the Doppelgänger in Gothic literature, and Anthologies and Collections of Gothic Fiction. A new section on teaching gothic fiction with TV and audiovisual materials is also included. Reflecting the global nature of contemporary Gothic studies, other special features include sections on French, German, Russian, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Norwegian, Danish, Swedish, Japanese, Australian, and Indian/Pakistani Gothic fiction. Readers are directed to pertinent websites and internet resources on authors and special subject areas. Two comprehensive indexes are included to facilitate searching. This impressive reference source proves that the genre of gothic fiction is not frozen in time, but rather is expanding exponetially across cultures, nations, and historical periods, making this a requisite addition to any academic library collection.
Product Details
Format
Hardback
Publication date
2004
Publisher
Scarecrow Press United States
Number of pages
1232
Condition
New
Number of Pages
1232
Place of Publication
Lanham, MD, United States
ISBN
9780810851016
SKU
V9780810851016
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-15
About Frederick S. Frank
Frederick S. Frank is Professor Emeritus of English at Allegheny College, Meadville, Pennsylvania. He is also the author of Guide to the Gothic (Scarecrow, 1984) and Guide to the Guide II (Scarecrow, 1995).
Reviews for Guide to the Gothic III
Frank is skilled at elucidating the best in critical commentary by summarizing the point of departure that makes each source valuable to an analysis of Gothic literature. Annotations are clear and unpedantic...Recommended for large public and college and university libraries.
Booklist
Faculty will find particularly useful the lists of anthologies and a section on teaching gothic fiction....[Frank's] expertise shines through his annotations, to each of which he adds personal commentary, summarizing arguments, establishing a critical framework, and calling authors to task for inaccuracies. Although the guide's audience is limited, no work rivals its scope and detail, and scholars of gothic literature will find it indispensable. Highly recommended.
CHOICE
Libraries that already own GGI and GGII will certainly want to obtain Guide to the Gothic III to supplement an already excellent guide to selected works appropriate for reader advice and collection development as well as scholarly research in Gothic genre.
s
This volume is an excellent and definitive reference work on this topic.
American Reference Books Annual
Frank has been in the business of Gothic for over a quarter of a century. For that reason alone scholars owe him a huge debt....The bibliographer notes that of the 5,706 entries in the GG III, about ten percent represent dissertations or master's theses. Frank's work is surely significant here. He made those dissertations possible, or at least made many of them notably easier to finish. This two-volume update of two earlier Guides (also by Frank, 1984, 1995) is a labyrinthian, Gothic read, full of interesting turns and twists.
Gothic Studies
...Frank's comprehensive survey provides valuable support for the study of Gothic, horror, fantastic and genre literature.
Lawrence Looks at Books
This two-volume guide offers researchers and students a comprehensive bibliographical survey of Gothic scholarship and criticism of the twentieth and early twenty- first century. Over 1,600 new, annotated entries covering 1994-2003 are included, along with more than 4,000 shortened entries from the previous volumes. New studies on Anne Rice and Angela Carter are included, as well as sections on Gothic chapbooks, blue books, shilling shockers, pre-Gothicism and graveyard verse, classical English authors and the Gothic, Gothic revival architecture, the doppelgänger in Gothic literature, and anthologies and collections of Gothic fiction. Other sections feature French, German, Russian, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Norwegian, Danish, Swedish, Japanese, Australian, and Indian/Pakistani Gothic fiction to reflect the global nature of contemporary Gothic studies. Frank also incorporates a new section on teaching Gothic fiction with television and audiovisual material, and directs readers to pertinent websites and Internet resources.
Reference and Research Book News
...tons of interesting things to delve into in an easy-to-understand format. The almost addictively easy entries to read through kept me busy for months, and still have me looking up the more esoteric critical entries.
Green Man Review
Booklist
Faculty will find particularly useful the lists of anthologies and a section on teaching gothic fiction....[Frank's] expertise shines through his annotations, to each of which he adds personal commentary, summarizing arguments, establishing a critical framework, and calling authors to task for inaccuracies. Although the guide's audience is limited, no work rivals its scope and detail, and scholars of gothic literature will find it indispensable. Highly recommended.
CHOICE
Libraries that already own GGI and GGII will certainly want to obtain Guide to the Gothic III to supplement an already excellent guide to selected works appropriate for reader advice and collection development as well as scholarly research in Gothic genre.
s
This volume is an excellent and definitive reference work on this topic.
American Reference Books Annual
Frank has been in the business of Gothic for over a quarter of a century. For that reason alone scholars owe him a huge debt....The bibliographer notes that of the 5,706 entries in the GG III, about ten percent represent dissertations or master's theses. Frank's work is surely significant here. He made those dissertations possible, or at least made many of them notably easier to finish. This two-volume update of two earlier Guides (also by Frank, 1984, 1995) is a labyrinthian, Gothic read, full of interesting turns and twists.
Gothic Studies
...Frank's comprehensive survey provides valuable support for the study of Gothic, horror, fantastic and genre literature.
Lawrence Looks at Books
This two-volume guide offers researchers and students a comprehensive bibliographical survey of Gothic scholarship and criticism of the twentieth and early twenty- first century. Over 1,600 new, annotated entries covering 1994-2003 are included, along with more than 4,000 shortened entries from the previous volumes. New studies on Anne Rice and Angela Carter are included, as well as sections on Gothic chapbooks, blue books, shilling shockers, pre-Gothicism and graveyard verse, classical English authors and the Gothic, Gothic revival architecture, the doppelgänger in Gothic literature, and anthologies and collections of Gothic fiction. Other sections feature French, German, Russian, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Norwegian, Danish, Swedish, Japanese, Australian, and Indian/Pakistani Gothic fiction to reflect the global nature of contemporary Gothic studies. Frank also incorporates a new section on teaching Gothic fiction with television and audiovisual material, and directs readers to pertinent websites and Internet resources.
Reference and Research Book News
...tons of interesting things to delve into in an easy-to-understand format. The almost addictively easy entries to read through kept me busy for months, and still have me looking up the more esoteric critical entries.
Green Man Review