The Gothic and death offers the first ever published study devoted to
the subject of the Gothic and death across the centuries. It
investigates how the multifarious strands of the Gothic and the concepts
of death, dying, mourning and memorialisation ('the Death Question') -
have intersected and been configured cross-culturally to diverse ends
from the mid-eighteenth century to the present day. Drawing on recent
scholarship in such fields as Gothic Studies, film theory, Women's and
Gender Studies and Thanatology Studies, this interdisciplinary
collection of fifteen essays by international scholars combines an
attention to socio-historical and cultural contexts with a rigorous
close reading of works, both classic and lesser known. This area of
enquiry is considered by way of such popular and uncanny figures as
corpses, ghosts, zombies and vampires, and across various cultural and
literary forms such as Graveyard Poetry, Romantic poetry, Victorian
literature, nineteenth-century
Italian and Russian literature, Anglo-American film and television,
contemporary Young Adult fiction and Bollywood film noir.