----- 怪兽和罪恶:持久邪恶的神话和隐喻
Introduction Section One: Monstrous Origins: Histories from the Deep and Transformed Humans (Where ever they come from, they keep coming) Paul DOBRASZCZYK: "Monster Sewers": Experiencing London's Main Drainage System Kevin Alexander BOON: Ontological Anxiety Made Flesh: The Zombie in Literature, Film and Culture Peter DENDLE: The Zombie as Barometer of Cultural Anxiety Section Two: The Monster and the Political (Once they get into politics you can't get rid of them) Neda ATANASOSKI: Dracula as Ethnic Conflict: The Technologies of "Humanitarian Intervention" in the Balkans during the 1999 NATO Bombing of Serbia and Kosovo Kristen Williams BACKER: Kultur-Terror: The Composite Monster in Nazi Visual Propaganda Elun GABRIEL: The Anarchist as Monster in Fin-de-Siecle Europe Section Three: Familial Monsters (Maybe some of them are regular folk like you and me) Emily CHENG: Family, Race, and Citizenship in Disney's Lilo and Stitch Colette BALMAIN: The Enemy Within: The Child as Terrorist in the Contemporary American Horror Film Nicola GOC: 'Monstrous Mothers' and the Media Greg TUCK: Of Monsters, Masturbators and Markets: Autoerotic Desire, Sexual Exchange and the Cinematic Serial Killer Section Four: Miscellaneous Monsters (They can be evil, male, female, but most importantly beware, they can be cute.) Ben BAROOTES: Nobody's Meat: Freedom through Monstrosity in Contemporary British Fiction Niall SCOTT: God Hates Us All: Kant, Radical Evil and the Diabolical Monstrous Human in Heavy Metal Maja BRZOZOWSKA-BRYWCZYNSKA: Monstrous/Cute: Notes on the Ambivalent Nature of Cuteness
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