Bodies Out of Place: Poe, Premature Burial, and The Uncanny

“Bodies Out of Place” discusses some of the ways Edgar Allan Poe confronted the taboos or boundaries associated with dying bodies. In tales such as “The Premature Burial,” “Ligeia,” and “The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar,” Poe blurred the boundaries between life and death not only to show how str...

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Main Author: Carl H. Sederholm
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh 2017-05-01
Series:Forum
Online Access:http://journals.ed.ac.uk/forum/article/view/1877
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author Carl H. Sederholm
author_facet Carl H. Sederholm
author_sort Carl H. Sederholm
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description “Bodies Out of Place” discusses some of the ways Edgar Allan Poe confronted the taboos or boundaries associated with dying bodies. In tales such as “The Premature Burial,” “Ligeia,” and “The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar,” Poe blurred the boundaries between life and death not only to show how strange they are but also to suggest how little human beings understand about the problem of death. Poe complicates this matter by suggesting that, even though some bodies may show all appearances of death, they remain very much alive. Even more frightening, Poe also suggests that some dead bodies may even somehow force their way back to life. Ultimately, Poe’s bodies resist easy classification because they are neither completely alive nor completely dead.
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spelling doaj.art-84fc4bbb16e141969d081cd2a7d308db2022-12-22T16:20:00ZengUniversity of EdinburghForum1749-97712017-05-012410.2218/forum.24.18771877Bodies Out of Place: Poe, Premature Burial, and The UncannyCarl H. Sederholm0Brigham Young University“Bodies Out of Place” discusses some of the ways Edgar Allan Poe confronted the taboos or boundaries associated with dying bodies. In tales such as “The Premature Burial,” “Ligeia,” and “The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar,” Poe blurred the boundaries between life and death not only to show how strange they are but also to suggest how little human beings understand about the problem of death. Poe complicates this matter by suggesting that, even though some bodies may show all appearances of death, they remain very much alive. Even more frightening, Poe also suggests that some dead bodies may even somehow force their way back to life. Ultimately, Poe’s bodies resist easy classification because they are neither completely alive nor completely dead.http://journals.ed.ac.uk/forum/article/view/1877
spellingShingle Carl H. Sederholm
Bodies Out of Place: Poe, Premature Burial, and The Uncanny
Forum
title Bodies Out of Place: Poe, Premature Burial, and The Uncanny
title_full Bodies Out of Place: Poe, Premature Burial, and The Uncanny
title_fullStr Bodies Out of Place: Poe, Premature Burial, and The Uncanny
title_full_unstemmed Bodies Out of Place: Poe, Premature Burial, and The Uncanny
title_short Bodies Out of Place: Poe, Premature Burial, and The Uncanny
title_sort bodies out of place poe premature burial and the uncanny
url http://journals.ed.ac.uk/forum/article/view/1877
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