These are the sources and citations used to research Critical Review. This bibliography was generated on Cite This For Me on
In-text: (Ellis, 2007)
Your Bibliography: Ellis, M., 2007. The history of gothic fiction. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, pp.12-14, 17-24, 189-194.
In-text: (Mulvey-Roberts and Turcotte, 2002)
Your Bibliography: Mulvey-Roberts, M. and Turcotte, G., 2002. The handbook to Gothic literature. Basingstoke, Hampshire [u.a.]: Palgrave Macmillan, pp.10-19.
Acclaimed authors, including Tim Winton, Robert Drewe and Peter Temple, have penned dark, brooding novels about troubled men who retreat to the coast. The sea, where they surf, swim and fish, has a sublime beauty, arousing feelings of awe and wonder. These men harbour secrets; sometimes they’re menaced by grotesque characters. Often they’re mourning a woman’s death. Like Frankenstein’s monster (Shelley 1818), they long for a mate – the feminine is lost.
In-text: (Tondorf, 2016)
Your Bibliography: Tondorf, C., 2016. Lure and Does the coast have a place in the Australian gothic landscape. Masters. Southern Cross University.
In-text: (Vernay, 2007)
Your Bibliography: Vernay, J., 2007. Sex in the City: Sexual Predation in Contemporary Australian Grunge Fiction. Journal of the Australasian Universities Language and Literature Association, 2007(107), pp.145-158.
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