A Corpse by Any Other Name: Romancing the Language of the Body in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein for the Adam Storyline in Buffy the Vampire Slayer.Published in:Slayage, 2020, v. 52, p. 121By:Hodge, Amber P.Publication type:Article
Terraforming the Earth-That-Was: Planetary Engineering, Utopia, and the Anthropocene in Joss Whedon's Firefly and Serenity.Published in:Slayage, 2020, v. 52, p. 85By:Hautsch, JessicaPublication type:Article
Vampire Slaying in Buffy the Vampire Slayer May Result from Disrupted Ion Signaling.Published in:Slayage, 2020, v. 52, p. 64By:Freedland, JulianPublication type:Article
Messy Postcolonialism in Joss Whedon's Firefly-Serenity 'Verse.Published in:Slayage, 2020, v. 52, p. 34By:Evon, Carrie RosePublication type:Article
A "Chosen" Hope with a "Gingerbread" Outcome: Democratization of (Media) Power in Buffy The Vampire Slayer as a Metaphor of Online Abuse on High-Profile Criminal Cases.Published in:Slayage, 2020, v. 52, p. 1By:Are, CarolinaPublication type:Article