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She-Wolf: A Cultural History of Female Werewolves

(Paperback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

She-Wolf: A Cultural History of Female Werewolves

Contributors:

By (Author) Hannah Priest

ISBN:

9781526116895

Publisher:

Manchester University Press

Imprint:

Manchester University Press

Publication Date:

2nd June 2017

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Dewey:

398.2454

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

240

Dimensions:

Width 156mm, Height 234mm

Description

She-wolf explores the cultural history of the female werewolf, from her first appearance in medieval literature to recent incarnations in film, television and popular literature. The book includes contributors from various disciplines, and offers a cross-period, interdisciplinary exploration of a perennially popular cultural production. The book covers material from the Middle Ages to the present day with chapters on folklore, history, witch trials, Victorian literature, young adult literature, film and gaming. Considering issues such as religious and social contexts, colonialism, constructions of racial and gendered identities, corporeality and subjectivity - as well as female body hair, sexuality and violence - She-wolf reveals the varied ways in which the female werewolf is a manifestation of complex cultural anxieties, as well as a site of continued fascination. -- .

Reviews

The chapters address many of the standards in werewolf literature but, ultimately, they strive to challenge this canon, arguing both that werewolf literature is not restrictively a masculine archetype and that feminist studies of the wild woman should not simply sweep she-werewolves under the monstrous feminine rug. But by the end even with these complications and contradictions they merge at last, readers will find, into a multifaceted beast who stares readers in the eye and grins wickedly, hungrily. For, after all, like the adolescent protagonist giggling in the burly wolfs arms in Angela Carters The Company of Wolves, [we are] nobodys meat.
Jonathan W. Thurston, Michigan State University, Nordic Journal of Science Fiction and Fantasy Research

Overall, the collection delivers on its promise to take ... a specific and localised approach, revealing historical, literary, cinematic and folkloric contexts for iterations of the female lycanthrope ... In general, the volume, both in its entirety and as individual chapters, will interest cultural historians, English and comparative literature scholars, and film/media and area studies specialists, and could be employed in lower-level and upper-division courses on the topic.
Svitlana Krys, MacEwan University, HNet Online

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Author Bio

Hannah Priest is an Honorary Research Fellow at Swansea University

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