Northeast Fantastic is the official blog of the Northeast Alliance for Scholarship on the Fantastic and the allied Fantastic Areas (Fantasy & Science Fiction and Monsters & the Monstrous) of the Northeast Popular Culture/American Culture Association (a.k.a. NEPCA), a regional affiliate of the Popular Culture Association and the American Culture Association.
Monday, October 25, 2010
Whedon Links Added
Many thanks to David Kociemba of Emerson College for alerting me of the existence of Watcher Junior: The Undergraduate Journal of Whedon Studies. I have added links to the journal and additional Whedon-related links to the resources sections of this blog.
NEPCA Area Update
The 2010 Annual Conference of NEPCA was held this past weekend, and I am pleased to report that all four sessions were well attended and included much productive discussion. My thanks to the presenters and audience members for their efforts.
Michael Torregrossa
Area Chair, Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Legend Area Chair
Michael Torregrossa
Area Chair, Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Legend Area Chair
Torchwood book from McFarland
I seem to have missed this and thank Marla Harris for alerting me to its existence:
Illuminating Torchwood: Essays on Narrative, Character and Sexuality in the BBC Series
Edited by Andrew Ireland
Series Editors Donald E. Palumbo and C.W. Sullivan III
ISBN 978-0-7864-4570-7
notes, index
251pp. softcover 2010
Price: $35.00
Description
Created in 2006 as a spinoff of Doctor Who, the internationally popular BBC television series Torchwood is a unique blend of science fiction and fantasy, with much more of an adult flavor than its progenitor. The series’ "omnisexual" protagonist, maverick 51st-century time agent Captain Jack Harkness, leads a team of operatives from the present-day Torchwood Institute, a secret organization dedicated to battling supernatural and extraterrestrial criminals. With its archetypal characters, adult language, subversive humor and openly homosexual and bisexual storylines, Torchwood provides a wealth of material for scholarly analysis and debate.
Using Torchwood as its focal point, this timely collection of essays by a range of experts and enthusiasts provides an interpretive framework for understanding the continually developing forms and genres of contemporary television drama.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction—Reading the Rift (ANDREW IRELAND) 1
PART I: Narrative and Torchwood
One — Playing to the Crowd: Torchwood Knows We’re Watching
(ANDREW IRELAND) 11
Two — Existentialism and Christian Symbolism
(R. C. NEIGHBORS) 22
Three — Policing the Rift: The Monstrous and the Uncanny
(SUSAN J. WOLFE and COURTNEY HUSE WIKA) 30
Four — Touching the Other: Alien Contact and Transgressive Touch
(RIA CHEYNE) 43
Five — More Than Just a Hero’s Journey: Harry Potter, Frodo Baggins, and Captain Jack Harkness
(VALERIE ESTELLE FRANKEL) 53
Six — Screwing Aliens and Screwing with Aliens: Torchwood Slashes the Doctor
(RICHARD BERGER) 66
PART II: Character and Torchwood
Seven — The Eternal Vigil: Captain Jack as Byronic Hero
(G. TODD DAVIS) 79
Eight — Gwen’s Evil Stepmother: Concerning Gloves and Magic Slippers
(VALERIE ESTELLE FRANKEL) 90
Nine — Transgressive Torch Bearers: Who Carries the Confines of Gothic Aesthetics?
(DANIEL J. RAWCLIFFE) 102
Ten — The Alien Woman: Othering and the Oriental
(CARRIE DUNN) 113
Eleven — Outside the Heroic Paradigm
(TOM POWERS) 121
PART III: Sexuality and Torchwood
Twelve — “Love the coat”: Bisexuality, the Female Gaze and the Romance of Sexual Politics
(CHRISTOPHER PULLEN) 135
Thirteen — Fashioning Masculinity and Desire
(SARAH GILLIGAN) 153
Fourteen — Sexual Relations and Sexual Identity Issues: Brave New Worlds or More of the Old One?
(SHERRY GINN) 165
Fifteen — “Loving the Alien”: The Erotics of Technology
(PAUL WINTERS) 181
Sixteen — Cyberwomen and Sleepers: Rereading the Mulatta Cyborg and the Black Woman’s Body
(ELSPETH KYDD) 191
Seventeen — No Consent Necessary: A Feminist Perspective on Non-Consensual Penetration
(CARRIE DUNN) 203
Eighteen — Out in Space: Masculinity, Sexuality and the Science Fiction Heroics of Captain Jack
(LEE BARRON) 213
Episode Guide 227
About the Contributors 231
Index 235
Illuminating Torchwood: Essays on Narrative, Character and Sexuality in the BBC Series
Edited by Andrew Ireland
Series Editors Donald E. Palumbo and C.W. Sullivan III
ISBN 978-0-7864-4570-7
notes, index
251pp. softcover 2010
Price: $35.00
Description
Created in 2006 as a spinoff of Doctor Who, the internationally popular BBC television series Torchwood is a unique blend of science fiction and fantasy, with much more of an adult flavor than its progenitor. The series’ "omnisexual" protagonist, maverick 51st-century time agent Captain Jack Harkness, leads a team of operatives from the present-day Torchwood Institute, a secret organization dedicated to battling supernatural and extraterrestrial criminals. With its archetypal characters, adult language, subversive humor and openly homosexual and bisexual storylines, Torchwood provides a wealth of material for scholarly analysis and debate.
Using Torchwood as its focal point, this timely collection of essays by a range of experts and enthusiasts provides an interpretive framework for understanding the continually developing forms and genres of contemporary television drama.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction—Reading the Rift (ANDREW IRELAND) 1
PART I: Narrative and Torchwood
One — Playing to the Crowd: Torchwood Knows We’re Watching
(ANDREW IRELAND) 11
Two — Existentialism and Christian Symbolism
(R. C. NEIGHBORS) 22
Three — Policing the Rift: The Monstrous and the Uncanny
(SUSAN J. WOLFE and COURTNEY HUSE WIKA) 30
Four — Touching the Other: Alien Contact and Transgressive Touch
(RIA CHEYNE) 43
Five — More Than Just a Hero’s Journey: Harry Potter, Frodo Baggins, and Captain Jack Harkness
(VALERIE ESTELLE FRANKEL) 53
Six — Screwing Aliens and Screwing with Aliens: Torchwood Slashes the Doctor
(RICHARD BERGER) 66
PART II: Character and Torchwood
Seven — The Eternal Vigil: Captain Jack as Byronic Hero
(G. TODD DAVIS) 79
Eight — Gwen’s Evil Stepmother: Concerning Gloves and Magic Slippers
(VALERIE ESTELLE FRANKEL) 90
Nine — Transgressive Torch Bearers: Who Carries the Confines of Gothic Aesthetics?
(DANIEL J. RAWCLIFFE) 102
Ten — The Alien Woman: Othering and the Oriental
(CARRIE DUNN) 113
Eleven — Outside the Heroic Paradigm
(TOM POWERS) 121
PART III: Sexuality and Torchwood
Twelve — “Love the coat”: Bisexuality, the Female Gaze and the Romance of Sexual Politics
(CHRISTOPHER PULLEN) 135
Thirteen — Fashioning Masculinity and Desire
(SARAH GILLIGAN) 153
Fourteen — Sexual Relations and Sexual Identity Issues: Brave New Worlds or More of the Old One?
(SHERRY GINN) 165
Fifteen — “Loving the Alien”: The Erotics of Technology
(PAUL WINTERS) 181
Sixteen — Cyberwomen and Sleepers: Rereading the Mulatta Cyborg and the Black Woman’s Body
(ELSPETH KYDD) 191
Seventeen — No Consent Necessary: A Feminist Perspective on Non-Consensual Penetration
(CARRIE DUNN) 203
Eighteen — Out in Space: Masculinity, Sexuality and the Science Fiction Heroics of Captain Jack
(LEE BARRON) 213
Episode Guide 227
About the Contributors 231
Index 235
About the Author
Andrew Ireland is the associate dean for undergraduate students in the Media School of the United Kingdom’s Bournemouth University. In 2004 he was awarded a National Teaching Fellowship by the Higher Education Academy.
Donald E. Palumbo is a professor of English at East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina. He lives in Greenville. C.W. Sullivan III is in the English department at East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina.
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