Amy H. Sturgis's Blog, page 4

December 11, 2024

Revisiting Frankenstein

I’ve been on a Mary Shelley roll lately! On my latest “Looking Back at Genre History” segment on the StarShipSofa podcast (Episode 747), I revisit the brilliant Frankenstein. Here is the episode.

Pictured are open pages of The New Annotated Frankenstein by Mary Shelley and edited by Leslie S. Klinger. The pages show sepia-toned decorative artwork around the edges and a vintage illustration of Victor Frankenstein fleeing his awakened Creature. ALTThe logo for (retrofuturist artwork with a rocket in space) for "Looking Back on Genre History with Amy H. Sturgis" for the StarShipSofa podcast.ALT
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Published on December 11, 2024 03:29

December 9, 2024

Why You Should Read The Last Man by Mary Shelley

One of the most relevant works you can read right now was published in 1826.

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Published on December 09, 2024 14:36

Dark Academia Works Inspired by True Crime Cases?

dramyhsturgis:


Hello, all! I am looking for recommendations of Dark Academia works (novels, short stories, films, television series) based on true crime. I would be grateful for any suggestions for my list. Thank you!


I am intentionally casting my net widely, defining the Dark Academic genre (as opposed to the aesthetic) as one that focuses on an academic setting and educational experience, employs Gothic modes of storytelling, cultivates a dark mood by contemplating the subject of death, and offers critique for interrogating imbalances and abuses of power.*


The opening page of Shirley Jackson's novel Hangsaman. On the page sits a pin with a classical bust, a snake, and the words "Dark Academia" on it.ALT

Below the cut is my current list of Dark Academia Works Inspired by True Crime Cases. All suggestions are welcome!


Dark Academia Works Inspired/Informed by True Crime Cases


Note 1: “True crime” is defined here as a specific case (for example, a murder or missing person’s case), not as a larger historical event (for example, the Salem Witch Trials or the Opium Wars) or an amalgam of cases (for example, general hazing in fraternities).
Note 2: This list is in chronological order based on the true crime case.
Note 3: Some works that aren’t fully DA but incorporate DA sections are included.


TRUE CRIME: 1897 disappearance of student Bertha Mellish from Mount Holyoke College
DA novels:
The Button Field by Gail Husch (2014)
Killingly by Katharine Beutner (2023)


TRUE CRIME: 1924 killing of Bobby Franks by University of Chicago students Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb
DA Novels:
Compulsion by Meyer Levin (1956)
Nothing but the Night by James Yaffe (1957)
Little Brother Fate by Mary-Carter Roberts (1957)
The Secret History by Donna Tartt (1992)
These Violent Delights by Micah Nemerever (2020)
Hollow Fires by Samira Ahmed (2022)
Jazzed by Jill Dearman (2022)
DA films:
Rope (1948), Compulsion (1959), and Murder by Numbers (2002)


TRUE CRIME: 1932 kidnapping and killing of Charles Lindbergh, Jr.; 1933 kidnapping and killing of Brooke Hart; and 1932-1934 crime spree of Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow
DA novels:
Truly Devious books by Maureen Johnson (especially the first trilogy, 2018-2020)


TRUE CRIME: 1944 killing of David Kammerer by Columbia University student Lucien Carr
DA film:
Kill Your Darlings (2013)


TRUE CRIME: 1946 disappearance of student Paula Jean Welden from Bennington College
DA novels:
Hangsaman by Shirley Jackson (1951)
Last Seen Wearing by Hillary Waugh (1952)
The Secret History by Donna Tartt (1992)
Shirley by Susan Scarf Merrell (2014)
Quantum Girl Theory by Erin Kate Ryan (2022)


TRUE CRIME: 1973 killing of student Cynthia Hellman at Randolph-Macon Women’s College
DA novel:
Good Girls Lie by J.T. Ellison (2019)


TRUE CRIME: 1978 killing of students Margaret Bowman and Lisa Levy and attack of students Kathy Kleiner and Karen Chandler by Ted Bundy at Florida State University
DA novel:
Bright Young Women by Jessica Knoll (2023)


TRUE CRIME: 1985 killing of Derek and Nancy Haysom by University of Virginia students Elizabeth Haysom and Jens Söring
DA novel:
With a Kiss We Die by L.R. Dorn (2023)


TRUE CRIME: 1999 killing of student Hae Min Lee from Woodlawn High School (by Adnan Syed? debated)
DA novel:
I Have Some Questions for You by Rebecca Makkai (2023)


TRUE CRIME: 2022 killing of students Madison Mogen, Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle, and Ethan Chapin from the University of Idaho (by Washington State University student Bryan Kohberger? currently awaiting trial)
DA novel:
This Book Will Bury Me by Ashley Winstead (2025)


*(I go into this definition in further detail in my segment here on the StarShipSofa podcast, my graduate course on Dark Academia, and my 2023 academic essay “Dark Arts and Secret Histories: Investigating Dark Academia.”)


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Published on December 09, 2024 05:35

December 1, 2024

Paula Welden and Missing Students

On December 1, 1946, sophomore Bennington College student Paula Jean Welden vanished. Her disappearance remains an unsolved mystery.

I’m currently working on a book project that involves the Welden case. Today it feels especially important to say her name.

Note: If anyone would like a (very brief!) peek into my current book project, here is a video of my presentation “Missing Students and Their Fictional Afterlives: True Crime, Crime Fiction, and Dark Academia.“ I gave this talk earlier this year at the Popular Culture Research Network’s “Guilty Pleasures: Examining Crime in Popular Culture” conference.

This image of Paula Jean Welden (a black-and-white portrait of a young woman in her late teens) was circulated in missing person flyers and newspapers at the time of her disappearance in 1946. She is wearing a sweater with a collared shirt and necklace, sitting with one arm beside/behind her on the back of the sofa, regarding the photographer. ALTThe Missing Person flyer circulated after Paula Welden's disappearance on December 1, 1946, including photos and a writing sample of hers, as well as descriptions of her and instructions on where to report information about her disappearance and/or whereabouts. ALT
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Published on December 01, 2024 06:22

November 18, 2024

Bertha Mellish and Missing Students

On November 18, 1897, junior student Bertha Lane Mellish vanished from Mount Holyoke College. Her disappearance remains an unsolved mystery.

I’m currently working on a book project that involves the Mellish case. Today it feels especially important to say her name.

Note: If anyone would like a (very brief!) peek into my current book project, here is a video of my presentation “Missing Students and Their Fictional Afterlives: True Crime, Crime Fiction, and Dark Academia.“ I gave this talk earlier this year at the Popular Culture Research Network’s “Guilty Pleasures: Examining Crime in Popular Culture” conference.

Missing Person flyer offering a $500 reward for help finding missing student Bertha Lane Mellish. This broadside, which includes a portrait of Bertha Mellish, was posted December 10, 1897, during the search for missing Mount Holyoke College student.ALTThe opening screen of the video for "Missing Students and Their Fictional Afterlives: True Crime, Crime Fiction, and Dark Academia" by Amy H. Sturgis, with an image of a newspaper clipping from 1897 that reads "Missing from the College: Strange Disappearance of Miss Bertha Lane Mellish." ALT
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Published on November 18, 2024 08:16

Bertha Mellish and the Missing Student

On November 18, 1897, junior student Bertha Lane Mellish vanished from Mount Holyoke College. Her disappearance remains an unsolved mystery.

I’m currently working on a book project that involves the Mellish case. Today it feels especially important to say her name.

Note: If anyone would like a (very brief!) peek into my current book project, here is a video of my presentation “Missing Students and Their Fictional Afterlives: True Crime, Crime Fiction, and Dark Academia.“ I gave this talk earlier this year at the Popular Culture Research Network’s “Guilty Pleasures: Examining Crime in Popular Culture” conference.

Missing Person flyer offering a $500 reward for help finding missing student Bertha Lane Mellish. This broadside, which includes a portrait of Bertha Mellish, was posted December 10, 1897, during the search for missing Mount Holyoke College student.ALTThe opening screen of the video for "Missing Students and Their Fictional Afterlives: True Crime, Crime Fiction, and Dark Academia" by Amy H. Sturgis, with an image of a newspaper clipping from 1897 that reads "Missing from the College: Strange Disappearance of Miss Bertha Lane Mellish." ALT
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Published on November 18, 2024 08:16

November 12, 2024

The Last Dangerous Visions

On my latest “Looking Back at Genre History” segment on the StarShipSofa podcast (Episode 745), I discuss the New Wave in science fiction and the Dangerous Visions anthologies, including the newly-published The Last Dangerous Visions.

Image (posted by Blackstone Publishing) of the three science fiction anthologies Dangerous Visions; Again, Dangerous Visions; and, on top of the stack, The Last Dangerous Visions. ALTThe logo for (retrofuturist artwork with a rocket in space) for "Looking Back on Genre History with Amy H. Sturgis" for the StarShipSofa podcast.ALT
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Published on November 12, 2024 05:33

November 7, 2024

Just a reminder that these great dystopian works were meant to be warnings, not suggestions.

dramyhsturgis:


Just a reminder that these great dystopian works were meant to be warnings, not suggestions.
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Published on November 07, 2024 06:03

November 6, 2024

“Men love a prop so well, that they will lean on a pointed poisoned spear…”

“Men love a prop so well, that they will lean on a pointed poisoned spear…”

Mary Shelley, The Last Man (1826)

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Published on November 06, 2024 03:21

October 31, 2024

Halloween Countdown 2024, Happy Halloween!

Happy Halloween!                                                          

Today’s text is “It’s Halloween” from The Philadelphia Inquirer on 10/31/1898.

Read the article here.

Quote: “Goblins and fairies, good and evil, will be running amuck to-night, if the old Halloween traditions do not fail…. Every one may be both superstitious and sentimental to-night.”

Black-and-white newspaper headlines say, "It's Halloween: Goblins and Fairies Will Be Roaming Abroad To-night... To Learn The Edict of Fate... Methods That May Be Employed by Those Desiring to See Into the Future."ALT

It’s Halloween headline: “Goblins and Fairies Will Be Roaming Abroad Tonight”

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Published on October 31, 2024 03:24