Loading...

Vampirism

Literary Tropes of Decadence and Entropy

by Michael J. Dennison (Author)
©2001 Monographs 155 Pages

Summary

This study of the vampire in literature from the early nineteenth century to the present analyzes its metaphorical characteristics. The vampire is the perfect figure of disorder and entropy, and its dominance as a literary figure/monster, an instigator of chaos of all kinds, makes it worthy of study for readers interested in an emerging theory of literary disorder as well as horror literature. Entropy, the most intriguing root metaphor of our time, and the vampire, figure of decadence, degeneration, and perverse physics, illuminate each other as Michael J. Dennison examines such famous works as Dracula and The Fall of the House of Usher, as well as works that have unjustly fallen into near obscurity.

Details

Pages
155
Year
2001
ISBN (Hardcover)
9780820449364
Language
English
Keywords
disorder chaos degeneration physics
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., Oxford, Wien, 2001. 155 pp.

Biographical notes

Michael J. Dennison (Author)

The Author: Michael J. Dennison is a poet, a playwright, and a scholar of comparative literature. His specific area of interest is literature of the occult and the supernatural. As a literary theorist, he is a proponent of the new entropy criticism emerging from Germany and Holland. Dr. Dennison lectures in English and philosophy at Carlow College in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Previous

Title: Vampirism