16 Super Useful Lessons That Got Drilled Into My Skull Because Of ‘Buffy The Vampire Slayer’

OK, this is all a bit ‘motivational’, I know–but still, it reminds us of how classy the scriptwritng for Buffy the Vampire Slayer is.

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CFP: Workshop on Dracula, Conference Education and Culture, Romania, June 2015

CALL FOR CONFERENCE PAPERS:

Workshop WHERE’S THE PLACE OF DRACULA:

(DE)CONSTRUCTING STEREOTYPES IN THE STUDY OF THE MYTHICAL SPACE IN LITERATURE AND THE ARTS

part of the International Conference Beliefs and Behaviours in Education and Culture, West University of Timișoara, Romania, 25-27 June 2015.

The study of literary texts may contribute to the (de)construction of stereotypes about people and places. Starting from the hypothesis that literature and myth simplify history and transform objective reality into subjective perception, we intend to discuss the relationship between space and imagination, including the situation in which a successful literary work may transform geographic reality into story, and the visit into a way of reading. We intend to discuss reading both as a hermeneutic practice and aesthetic experience, based on the impact of the work of art on the reader.

We open the discussion by the example of the Dracula myth, with the variety of its forms of manifestation (literature, film, visual arts etc.) and the representations of Transylvania in Western imagination, and we want to extend the debate to other spaces which are “transformed” by literary perception.

The workshop intends to open a debate on some issues such as, but not limited to:

–          Reading and feelings: subjective perceptions of geography and history;

–          The relationship between literature and film in the representation of the mythical space;

–          The importance of the Gothic in contemporary media representations: aesthetic experience and emotional impact;

–          Reading and stereotypes: empirical approaches to the reaction of the audience to narration or to the work of art;

–          The attraction of the audience to horror and violence: the identification with the fictional hero;

–          The association of myths (such as the Dracula myth or other myths revived in contemporary times) with real locations;

–          The contemporary uses of the Dracula myth: what does Dracula represent for Romanians, on the one hand, and for the Western readers, on the other?

–          Emotions and Identification;

–          Advantages and Disadvantages in using stereotypes in the study of the work of art;

–          Emotion and cognition in entertainment: the role of education.

The workshop is part of the International Conference Beliefs and Behaviours in Education and Culture, Timișoara, Romania, 25-27 June 2015.

Webpage of the workshop: http://www.dppd.uvt.ro/bbec/workshop-humanities.html

Website of the conference: http://www.dppd.uvt.ro/bbec/index.html

Keynote speakers:

Distinguished Professor Craig A. Andreson (Iowa State University and Director of Center of the Study of Violence)

Professor Donatella Abbate Badin (University of Turin)

Professor Brad J. Bushman (The Ohio State University and VU University Amsterdam)

Professor William Hughes (Bath Spa University)

Dr. Duncan Light (Manchester Metropolitan University)

Professor Tullio Scrimali (University of Catania)

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Franklin Gregory, The White Wolf (1941)

A new edition of Franklin Gregory’s werewolf novel, The White Wolf (1941), from the excellent independent publisher, Valancourt Books, who have made available a great range of neglected Gothic texts.

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Dracula Visits the Library, Trinity College Dublin, 24-27 october 2014

This looks like a fabulous exhibition:

This week, as Halloween approaches, Trinity College Library Dublin celebrates the work of alumnus Bram Stoker with a selection of editions and adaptations of Dracula in the Library Orientation Space. The Library has over three hundred print editions and adaptations of the novel.

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CFP: Daughter of Fangdom: A Conference on Women and the Television Vampire, University of Roehampton, 18 April 2015

Sam and I attended a great conference on vampires in TV, TV Fangdom, last year, organized by OGOM contributor Stacey Abbott with Lorna Jowett and Mike Starr at the University of Northampton.

Now, the sequel has been announced: Daughter of Fangdom: A Conference on Women and the Television Vampire, to be held at the University of Roehampton, 18 April 2015; I’m sure it will be equally stimulating.

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A Scientific Guide to Seeing Fairies. A fragment.

A fascinating blog essay by Franziska Kohlt on Lewis Carroll, Victorian science, and the perception of fairies.

Franziska Kohlt is a DPhil Candidate at Brasenose College at the University of Oxford, and a graduate tutor in English literature at St Anne’s College. She is working on a thesis exploring visions experienced in alternative states of consciousness in nineteenth century science and their portrayal in fantastic literature, specifically in the works of Lewis Carroll, George MacDonald, Charles Kingsley and H.G. Wells

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My hero: Mary Shelley by Neil Gaiman

The fantasy writer Neil Gaiman discusses the wonder of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein.

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Conference Report: Ann Radcliffe at 250

A great review by Carly Stevenson, Lauren Nixon and Kathleen Hudson of the marvellous Ann Radcliffe at 250 Conference at the University of Sheffield in June this year by . I attended this conference, superbly organized by the University of Stirling’s Dr Dale Townshend and Sheffield’s own Dr Angela Wright, and it was both welcoming and stimulating–one of the best conferences I have attended–and this report confirms that.

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Let me grab your soul away – Kate Bush and gothic

A fascinating article tracing Gothic themes in Kate Bush’s songs and the allusions to Gothic cinema therein.

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The Evolution of the Female Vampire

Jamie Spears, who is completing her PhD at the University of Sunderland, has written a fascinating account of the origins of female vampire here.

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