Saturday, October 22, 2022

Out Now from McFarland: Power and Subversion in Game of Thrones: Critical Essays on the HBO Series


Further information and ordering information is available at McFarland's website from this link.

Power and Subversion in Game of Thrones: Critical Essays on the HBO Series


Bibliographic Details


Edited by A. Keith Kelly

Format: softcover (6 x 9)

Pages: 198

Bibliographic Info: notes, bibliographies, index

Copyright Date: 2022

pISBN: 978-1-4766-8264-8;$39.95

eISBN: 978-1-4766-4466-0

Imprint: McFarland




About the Book


This collection of essays examines the structures of power and the ways in which power is exercised and felt in the fantasy world of Game of Thrones. It considers how the expectations of viewers, particularly within the genre of epic fantasy, are subverted across the full 8 seasons of the series. The assembled team of international scholars, representing a variety of disciplines, addresses such topics as the power of speech and magic; the role of nationality and politics; disability, race and gender; and the ways in which each reinforces or subverts power in Westeros and Essos.




Table of Contents


Acknowledgments v


Introduction
A. Keith Kelly 1


List of Seasons and Episodes: HBO’s Game of Thrones 7


Breaking the Wheel: Game of Thrones and the American Zeitgeist
Daniel Vollaro 13


Dangerous Nostalgia: Fantasies of Medievalism, Race, and Identity
Robert Allen Rouse 30


Game of Victims and Monsters: Representation of Sexual and Female Violence
Sylwia Borowska-Szerszun 48


Subversion or Reinforcement? Patriarchy and Masculinity
Andrew Howe 68


“I’ll go with anger”: Female Rage in and at Game of Thrones
Lindsey Mantoan 87


The Developing Verbal Power of Daenerys: A Pragmatics Analysis
Graham P. Johnson 108


“Who has a better story than Bran the Broken?”: The Power of Disability Narratives
Jan Doolittle Wilson 131


Magic’s Failure to Reanimate Fantasy
Jason M. Embry 161


A Brief Conclusion on the Conclusion
A. Keith Kelly 181


About the Contributors 185


Index 187




About the Author(s)


A. Keith Kelly is a professor of English at Georgia Gwinnett College, outside of Atlanta, where he teaches medieval literature, linguistics and writing. In addition to being a poet and author of short fiction, he has published work on literary pragmatics, Old Norse saga, the works of J.R.R. Tolkien and the representation of the Middle Ages in film and television.




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