7 results on '"Ailise Bulfin"'
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2. The International Circulation and Impact of Invasion Fiction
- Author
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Ailise Bulfin
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Economics ,Economic history ,Circulation (currency) ,Boiler (water heating) - Abstract
A key text of the pre-First World War invasion fiction genre, William Le Queux’s The Invasion of 1910 (1906) is often assumed to have sold in vast quantities and provoked major controversy. This article investigates the circulation and social impact of this divisive, polemical work before and during the war to provide a more accurate account of its reception. Using Marie Corelli’s proven bestseller The Sorrows of Satan (1895) as a comparator, the article shows sales of The Invasion of 1910 were similar to other bestselling novels, though not comparable to Corelli’s phenomenal sales. Le Queux’s text, however, punched above the weight of the typical bestseller in terms of its social influence, receiving parliamentary censure, extensive newspaper coverage, wide satire and polarised reader responses. Overall, this analysis provides insight into the workings of the popular fiction industry and the nature and extent of invasion fears in the early twentieth century.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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3. Introduction
- Author
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Harry Wood and Ailise Bulfin
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Media studies ,Misinformation ,Psychology - Abstract
The Introduction prefaces a double special issue of Critical Survey examining the work of controversial popular author, journalist and amateur spy William Le Queux from 1880 to 1920. Known as the ‘master of mystery’, Le Queux was prominent in transmitting exaggerated fears about British national security before, during and after the First World War. The Introduction provides a historical and literary framework for the special issue and outlines its central premises: that cultural production in Le Queux’s era was intimately connected with contemporary socio-political forces; that this relationship was well understood by authors such as Le Queux, and often exploited for propagandist purposes; and that the resulting literary efforts were sometimes successful in influencing public opinion. The Introduction also outlines the overall finding that Le Queux’s work tended to distort his subject matter, misinform his readership, and blur the lines between fact and fiction in pursuit of his defencist agenda.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. ‘Monster, give me my child’: How the myth of the paedophile as a monstrous stranger took shape in emerging discourses on child sexual abuse in late nineteenth-century Britain
- Author
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Ailise Bulfin
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Psychoanalysis ,History ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Sexology ,Journalism ,05 social sciences ,0507 social and economic geography ,06 humanities and the arts ,Mythology ,Popular fiction ,060202 literary studies ,050701 cultural studies ,Gothic ,Child sexual abuse ,Harm ,Paedophile ,0602 languages and literature ,Monster - Abstract
In the late-nineteenth century the origins of the modern concept of child sexual abuse (CSA) started to emerge in a set of intersecting medical and legal theories concerning the notion of sexual harm to children, especially in the new science of sexology. The concept was also shaped in sensational journalism and popular fiction which dramatically exploited the medico-legal theories in works that reached a wide audience. Within this set of overlapping discourses, this article identifies the developing characterisation of the abuser, or ‘paedophile’, as an outsider or stranger in order to provide distance from the uncomfortable reality that CSA is typically perpetrated by family members or others well known to the victims. The article also argues that much writing about sexual harm to children, including the factual treatments, often drew on the dark metaphors of gothic writing to avoid addressing this difficult subject explicitly. In this way the figure of the monster came to stand in for the perpetrator of sexual crimes against children, with the result that the paedophile was portrayed not just as a social outsider, but as a monstrous stranger – creating a persistent, detrimental myth which kept social attention away from the most common types of abuse. Royal Irish Academy (RIA) 2021-04-08 JG: Unpublished when uploaded -- double-check citation info and issue date on check date; DOI; set -text.
- Published
- 2021
5. Popular culture and the 'new human condition': Catastrophe narratives and climate change
- Author
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Ailise Bulfin
- Subjects
Global and Planetary Change ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Popular culture ,Environmental ethics ,Human condition ,Cognitive reframing ,010501 environmental sciences ,Fiction writing ,Oceanography ,01 natural sciences ,0506 political science ,Feeling ,Cultural studies ,050602 political science & public administration ,Narrative ,Sociology ,Cartography ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common ,Theme (narrative) - Abstract
Striking popular culture images of burnt landscapes, tidal waves and ice-bound cities have the potential to dramatically and emotively convey the dangers of climate change. Given that a significant number of people derive a substantial proportion of their information on the threat of climate change, or the “new human condition”, from popular culture works such as catastrophe movies, it is important that an investigation into the nature of the representations produced be embedded in the attempt to address the issue. What climate change-related messages may be encoded in popular films, television and novels, how are they being received, and what effects may they have? This article adopts the cultural studies perspective that popular culture gives us an important means by which to access the “structures of feeling” that characterise a society at a particular historic juncture: the views held and emotional states experienced by significant amounts of people as evident in disparate forms of cultural production. It further adopts the related viewpoint that popular culture has an effect upon the society in which it is consumed, as well as reflecting that society's desires and concerns – although the nature of the effect may be difficult to quantify. From this position, the article puts forward a theory on the role of ecological catastrophe narratives in current popular culture, before going on to review existing critical work on ecologically-charged popular films and novels which attempts to assess their effects on their audiences. It also suggests areas for future research, such as the prevalent but little studied theme of natural and environmental disaster in late-Victorian science fiction writing. This latter area is of interest because it reveals the emergence of an ecological awareness or structure of feeling as early as the late-nineteenth century, and allows the relationship of this development to environmental policy making to be investigated because of the historical timeframe. Effectively communicating the threat of climate change and the need to address it, reframing the perspective from a detached and scientifically-articulated problem to one of a human condition – immediate and personal – is on one level a task of narrative, or story-telling, and cultural studies has an important role to play in this and in elucidating the challenges involved. In line with the remit of the special issue in which this article appears, it is written as a review article specifically addressing the question of what cultural studies can contribute to helping to articulate the ‘new human condition’ of existence under climate change. As such, it offers some initial preliminary readings of popular culture trends, outlines a potential methodology, briefly summarises some effective work already done in the area and suggests further potential avenues of enquiry.
- Published
- 2017
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6. ‘To Arms!’: Invasion Narratives and Late-Victorian Literature
- Author
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Ailise Bulfin
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Literature ,Literary fiction ,Literature and Literary Theory ,business.industry ,Fiction theory ,Context (language use) ,Yellow Peril ,Victorian literature ,Narrative ,business ,Psychology ,Theme (narrative) ,Techno-thriller - Abstract
This article introduces readers to the fiction of invasion, a paranoid literary phenomenon that responded to widespread social concerns about the possible invasion of Britain by an array of hostile foreign forces in the period between 1870 and 1914. It begins with an overview of the development of this relatively unknown body of work in the late-Victorian and Edwardian periods, charting assumptions of imminent large-scale war, fascination with the technology of warfare and the marked participation of military men who used the fiction to agitate for increased defence spending. While this alarmist brand of popular fiction provoked considerable contemporary commentary, modern critical engagement with it has been somewhat limited. Beginning in the 1960s and dominated by the work of the master bibliographer I. F. Clarke, the initial scholarly response necessarily took the form of classification and survey and evinced particular interest in adjudging the accuracy of fictional predictions about future war. More recent scholarship is concerned with reading the fiction in the context of its own times, probing its relationship with external imperial factors and internal domestic concerns and its effectiveness as a propaganda tool. In addition to offering an overview of this line of enquiry, this article seeks to broaden the understanding of the invasion narrative in fin-de-siecle popular fiction, drawing lines out to the recurrence of the invasion theme across a broad range of genres and modes exceeding that of future war fiction and including so-called ‘yellow peril’ narratives, crime and detective fiction and the gothic. In conclusion, a number of avenues complementing the textual and the historical are suggested for future exploration.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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7. The Natural Catastrophe in Late Victorian Popular Fiction: 'How Will the World End?'
- Author
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Ailise Bulfin
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Literature ,History ,Literature and Literary Theory ,business.industry ,Natural catastrophe ,Popular fiction ,business - Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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