Discourses of affect in the 1930s Hollywood horror film cycle and in its aftermath to 1943
My PhD is a study of discourses of affect in the 1930s Hollywood horror cycle, which ran from 1931 to 1936, and the aftermath and conclusion of disputes related to such discourses which played out in the period from 1936 to 1943. I engage in a historicist study which examines the cycle's the pr...
Main Author: | Naylor, Alexandra Mary Patricia |
---|---|
Published: |
University College London (University of London)
2007
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.444535 |
Similar Items
-
The destruction of the male body in classic horror film
by: Peirse, Alison Louise
Published: (2007) -
Unhuman borderlands : madness, metamorphic monsters and landscape in contemporary horror cinema
by: Pugh, Catherine
Published: (2014) -
Hollywood, the family audience and the family film, 1930-2010
by: Brown, Noel
Published: (2010) -
Exploiting fear : directing the Hollywood horror franchise
by: Wilkinson, Simon Andrew
Published: (2006) -
The children's horror film : beneficial fear and subversive pleasure in an (im)possible Hollywood subgenre
by: Lester, Catherine
Published: (2016)