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El. knyga: Poe and Women: Recognition and Revision

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Edgar Allan Poe notoriously identified the death . . . of a beautiful woman as the most poetical topic in the world. Despite that cringeworthy claim, Poe drew creative inspiration from female authors, and women figure prominently among the artists and critics fascinated by the writers creative legacy. A book-length work about the various ways in which womenPoes female contemporaries, scholars, writers and artists, as well as women characters in Poe adaptationshave influenced perceptions of Poe is long overdue. Covering a time frame that extends from the mid-nineteenth century to the twenty-first, this collection features essays about all of these subjects. One goal of this book is recognizing how women have helped establish Poes reputation in the U.S. and abroad. The other is drawing attention to ways that constructions of womanhood accepted by Poe are revised in popular culture, a sphere where artistsin film, fiction, and comicsbuild on the subversive potential of Poes work while exposing its ideological limitations. Poe and Women will appeal not only to Poe specialists but also to anyone interested in his ongoing relevance to gender discussions inside and outside the academy.
List of Illustrations
vii
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction xi
Amy Brcmam Armiento
Travis Montgomery
PART I RECOGNITION
Chapter One "The Vast Pantheon of Speculation": Edgar Allan Poe and His Women Biographers
1(20)
Sandra Tome
Chapter Two Spiritual Dialogues: Lydia Maria Child, Edgar Allan Poe, and the Politics of Unity
21(28)
Adam C. Bradford
Chapter Three Fifty Years of Women's Scholarship on Poe
49(26)
Amy Branam Armiento
Chapter Four Transnational Poe and Women Scholars Abroad
75(16)
Clara Petino
PART II REVISION
Chapter Five "Can You See Me?": Poe's Female Characters and the Struggle for Self-Definition on Film
91(18)
Alexandra Reuber
Chapter Six "And She Grew Strangely": Poe, Women, and Comics
109(24)
John Edward Martin
Chapter Seven "Sort of E. A. Poeish": Edgar Allan Poe and Female Pulp Writers
133(18)
Kevin Knott
Chapter Eight Traces of Poe's House of Usher in the Work of Contemporary Women Horror Writers
151(20)
Melanie R. Anderson
Afterword: Maureen Cobb Mabbott and The Collected Works of Edgar Allan Poe 171(12)
Travis Montgomery
Index 183(12)
About the Editors and Contributors 195
Amy Branam Armiento is professor of English at Frostburg State University.

Travis Montgomery is associate professor of English at Oklahoma Christian University.