Literature, Film, and Their Hideous Progeny Adaptation and ElasTEXTi

This book posits adaptations as 'hideous progeny,' Mary Shelley's term for her novel, Frankenstein . Like Shelley's novel and her fictional Creature, adaptations that may first be seen as monstrous in fact compel us to shift our perspective on known liter

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Literature, Film, and Their Hideous Progeny

10.1057/9781137399021 - Literature, Film, and Their Hideous Progeny, Julie Grossman

Palgrave Studies in Adaptation and Visual Culture

Advisory Board: Sarah Cardwell, University of Kent; Deborah Cartmell, De Montfort University; Timothy Corrigan, University of Pennsylvania; Lars Ellestrom, Linnaeus University; Kamilla Elliott, Lancaster University; Christine Geraghty, University of Glasgow; Helen Hanson, University of Exeter; Linda Hutcheon, University of Toronto; Glenn Jellenik, University of Central Arkansas; Thomas Leitch, University of Delaware; Brian McFarlane, Monash University; Simone Murray, Monash University; James Naremore, Indiana University; Kate Newell, Savannah College of Art and Design; Laurence Raw, Baskent University; Robert Stam, New York University; Constantine Verevis, Monash University; Imelda Whelehan, University of Tasmania; Shannon Wells-Lassagne, Universite de Bretagne Sud. This series addresses how adaptation functions as a principal mode of text production in visual culture. What makes the series distinctive is its focus on visual culture as both a target and a source for adaptations, and a vision to include media forms beyond film and television such as videogames, mobile applications, interactive fiction and film, print and nonprint media, and the avant-garde. As such, the series will contribute to an expansive understanding of adaptation as a central, but only one, form of a larger phenomenon within visual culture. Adaptations are texts that are not singular but complexly multiple, connecting them to other pervasive plural forms: sequels, series, genres, trilogies, authorial oeuvres, appropriations, remakes, reboots, cycles, and franchises. This series especially welcomes studies that, in some form, treat the connection between adaptation and these other forms of multiplicity. Titles include: Julie Grossman LITERATURE, FILM, AND THEIR HIDEOUS PROGENY Adaptation and ElasTEXTity

Palgrave Studies in Adaptation and Visual Culture Series Standing Order ISBN 978–1–137–54205–4 Series Standing Order ISBN 978–1–137–54205–2 (outside North America only)

hardcover paperback

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