Now showing items 1-4 of 4

  • Horreur des villes maudites dans l'oeuvre de H. P. Lovecraft 

    Sayer, Frederic (Dalhousie University. Electronic Text Centre, 2004)
    Howard Phillips Lovecraft is forever weaving the same spider-web, in which both his hero and his readers invariably get caught. The real curse of his ancient cities (R'lyeh, Innsmouth, Arkham, Marblehead, Kingsport, Dunwich ...
  • Horreur, hyperbole et réticence chez Lovecraft 

    Lazzarin, Stefano (Dalhousie University. Electronic Text Centre, 2004)
    The work of Howard Phillips Lovecraft (1890-1937) represents a kind of « discursus interruptus » on horror and on the literary language that can best represent it. Lovecraft invents a new kind of horror, more hyperbolic ...
  • La Planète Mars dans les romans de science-fiction anglo-saxons des années 1990: La Peur du monstre de pierre 

    Villers, Aurelie (Dalhousie University. Electronic Text Centre, 2004)
    When it deals with the planet Mars, nineteen-nineties science-fiction faces an alternative: either the heroes adapt to Mars' hard conditions (and that's "pantropy"), or they adapt Mars to make it livable for human beings ...
  • Psychological Terror and Social Fears in Philip K. Dick's Science Fiction 

    Bettanin, Giuliano (Dalhousie University. Electronic Text Centre, 2004)
    Science-fiction and horror are closely related genres, both belonging to the larger domain of fantastic literature. They share a partly common history. This article aims to examine how Philip K. Dick, one of the most ...