Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/35675
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dc.contributor.advisorFerguson, Christine-
dc.contributor.advisorJones, Timothy-
dc.contributor.authorBabarczi, Zita-
dc.date.accessioned2024-01-25T13:42:41Z-
dc.date.issued2023-07-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/35675-
dc.description.abstractThis thesis examines the gendered dimensions of Anglophone, mainly American, conspiracy fiction in the period from the mid-twentieth-century to the beginning of the millennium. I posit that during this time, literary figurations of conspiracy in genre fiction are used to emplot gendered anxieties directly related to the political gains and losses of second-wave feminism. I trace the conspiratorial questioning, dissolution, and eventual reassertion of the patriarchal status quo through six novels and three genres: the Gothic novels of Ira Levin, the science fiction of Philip K. Dick, and the thrillers of Umberto Eco and Dan Brown. Levin’s fiction exemplifies white, middle-class American women’s anxiety that their husbands’ real allegiance may lie with patriarchy and not their marriage, literalising patriarchal power as a conspiracy. Dick’s novels emplot the anxiety induced by rapidly changing masculine norms, imagining a conspiratorial will as the driving force behind these changes. Eco and Brown query conspiracy’s viability to counteract the anxiety generated by the unmooring of gender roles, alighting on essentialist notions of femininity through which a new, updated patriarchy may be inaugurated. All four authors use the conventions of their chosen genre to colour and modify the core plot element of conspiracy. The mechanics of these generic conventions will be considered in each chapter. I pay further consideration to postmodernism’s impact on conspiracy fiction; in particular, the way in which the destabilisation of gender roles (the result of second-wave feminism) and the destabilisation of meaning (the result of postmodernity) becomes enmeshed in the American imagination. These novels depict the loss of traditional gender roles and the loss of faith in a knowable reality as functionally the same: a loss against which patriarchy reasserts itself via conspiratorial means. The politically, emotively, and generically heterogeneous expressions of patriarchy’s floundering and reassertion, as it is found in the selected genre texts of mid-to-late twentieth century Anglophone conspiracy fiction, is the topic of this thesis.en_GB
dc.language.isoenen_GB
dc.publisherUniversity of Stirlingen_GB
dc.subjectconspiracy fictionen_GB
dc.subjectconspiracyen_GB
dc.subjectCold War literatureen_GB
dc.subjectsecond wave feminismen_GB
dc.subjectgenre literatureen_GB
dc.subjectgenre fictionen_GB
dc.subjectGothicen_GB
dc.subjectscience fictionen_GB
dc.subjectIra Levinen_GB
dc.subjectPhilip K. Dicken_GB
dc.subjectUmberto Ecoen_GB
dc.subjectDan Brownen_GB
dc.subjectthrilleren_GB
dc.subjectconspiracy narrativeen_GB
dc.subjectGothic literatureen_GB
dc.subjectscience fiction literatureen_GB
dc.subjectthriller novelsen_GB
dc.subjectGothic novelsen_GB
dc.subjectscience fiction novelsen_GB
dc.title‘Like a bird caught in cobwebs’: gender and genre in Anglophone conspiracy fiction, 1959-2003en_GB
dc.typeThesis or Dissertationen_GB
dc.type.qualificationlevelDoctoralen_GB
dc.type.qualificationnameDoctor of Philosophyen_GB
dc.rights.embargodate2024-09-01-
dc.rights.embargoreasonI'm planning on turning one of the chapters into a journal article.en_GB
dc.contributor.funderThe Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotlanden_GB
dc.author.emailbabarcziz@gmail.comen_GB
dc.rights.embargoterms2024-09-02en_GB
dc.rights.embargoliftdate2024-09-02-
Appears in Collections:Literature and Languages eTheses

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