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The Bride of Frankenstein (1935)

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Bram Stoker Marries Florence Bolcomb

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Jeckyll and Hyde Published

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Dracula Published

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Le Fanu's Carmilla Published

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Monstrous desire: Dorian Gray & Gothic Homoeroticism

Dorian Gray's place in a gothic tradition of homoerotic monstrosity

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Monster Mash (1962)

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The First Publication of a Dickenson Poem

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Presumption; or, The Fate of Frankenstein

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Places of Relevance in Emily Dickinson's Life

     When annotating Dickenson’s poetry, it is easy to highlight her philosophies about loneliness.  She seems averse to notoriety of any kind, and seems to find enlightenment with solitude that others might find suffocating.  Her poems read like midnight confessions written from herself as “letters to the world” as she puts it, which creates her uniquely intimate poetry. 

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COVE is Collaborative Organization for Virtual Education, a scholar-driven open-access platform that publishes both peer-reviewed material and "flipped classroom" student projects built with our online tools.

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