Neo-Victorianism features contemporary twentieth- and twenty-first-century depictions of nineteenth-century settings, events, and characters. Specifically, literary and visual works utilise this historical environment (and often, real historical events) to reflect and address contemporary issues. Mark Llewellyn notes how neo-Victorian works often represent “marginalised voices, new histories of sexuality … and other generally ‘different’ versions of the Victorian” (165).
View More Challenging Cis-Heteronormativity in The Night BrotherTag: gender
Motherhood as Ecological Metaphor
Marie Hendry explores birth and humanities process for renewal.
View More Motherhood as Ecological MetaphorFifty Shades of the Future
In departure lounges, train stations and motorway services across the UK, one novel – or rather one trilogy – has graced the laps of engrossed readers for the past twelve months…
View More Fifty Shades of the Future