City Libraries, City of Gold Coast

Genre, reception, and adaptation in the "Twilight" series, edited by Anne Morey

Label
Genre, reception, and adaptation in the "Twilight" series, edited by Anne Morey
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Genre, reception, and adaptation in the "Twilight" series
Nature of contents
bibliography
Responsibility statement
edited by Anne Morey
Series statement
Ashgate studies in childhood, 1700 to the present
Table Of Contents
"Famine for food, expectation for content": Jane Eyre as intertext for the "Twilight" saga / Anne Morey -- Fantasy, subjectivity, and desire in Twilight and its sequels / Jackie C. Horne -- Postfeminist fantasies: sexuality and femininity in Stephenie Meyer's "Twilight" series / Kristine Moruzi -- Narrative intimacy and the question of control in the "Twilight" saga / Sara K. Day -- Bridges, nodes, and bare life: race in the "Twilight" saga / Alexandra Hidalgo -- Girl culture and the "Twilight" franchise / Catherine Driscoll -- "Twilight" fans represented in commercial paratexts and inter-fandoms: resisting and repurposing negative fan stereotypes / Matt Hills -- Coming to a violent end: narrative closure and the death drive in Stephenie Meyer's "Twilight" series / Rachel DuBois -- The giddyshame paradox: why "Twilight's" anti-fans cannot stop reading a series they (love to) hate / Sarah Wagenseller Goletz -- Between Twi-Hards and Twi-Haters: the complicated terrain of online "Twilight" audience communities / Anne Gilbert -- "I'd never given much thought to how I would die": uses (and the decline) of voiceover in the "Twilight" films / Katie Kapurch -- Traveling in the same boat: adapting Stephenie Meyer's Twilight, New Moon, and Eclipse to Film / Mark D. Cunningham -- Adaptation and reception: the case of the "Twilight" saga in Korea / Hye Chung Han and Chan Hee Hwang
Classification
Contributor

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