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Haunting Masculinity and Frightening Femininity: The Novels of John Bellairs

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Abstract

While developing scholarship around children’s horror fiction has focused on the works of contemporary writers, this essay provides a close reading of the novels of John Bellairs, a leading and early practitioner of the genre. It argues that the first three novels in his Lewis Barnevelt series may be understood as addressing some of the same anxieties related to gender and sexuality as those found in adult works of horror. Echoing changing discourses about masculinity at work in the late sixties and seventies, Bellair’s novels propose a new form of manhood for young readers at the same time they continue to tie femininity to loss, lack and unspeakable desires.

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Correspondence to Dawn Heinecken.

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Dawn Heinecken is Associate Professor of Women’s and Gender Studies at the University of Louisville and is the author of The Warrior Women of Television: A Feminist Cultural Analysis of the New Female Body in Popular Media and, with Vickie Shields, a co-writer of Measuring Up: How Advertising Affects Self-Image, which won the 2004 National Communication Association’s award for Outstanding Research in Visual Communication.

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Heinecken, D. Haunting Masculinity and Frightening Femininity: The Novels of John Bellairs. Child Lit Educ 42, 118–131 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10583-010-9127-7

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