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Touch Me/Don’t Touch Me: Representations of Female Archetypes in Ann Nocenti’s Daredevil (2019)
Journal Article
(2019). Touch Me/Don’t Touch Me: Representations of Female Archetypes in Ann Nocenti’s Daredevil. https://doi.org/10.16995/cg.148

In the late 1980s, Ann Nocenti became the principle writer on the Marvel comic book, Daredevil, the second woman to be lead creator on the book and the first to write a significant run on an ongoing basis. Nocenti integrated themes relating to social... Read More about Touch Me/Don’t Touch Me: Representations of Female Archetypes in Ann Nocenti’s Daredevil.

Types, obstacles and sources of empowerment in co-design: the role of shared material objects and processes (2019)
Journal Article
(2019). Types, obstacles and sources of empowerment in co-design: the role of shared material objects and processes. CoDesign, 1 - 20. https://doi.org/10.1080/15710882.2019.1605383

Co-design is intrinsically linked to the notion of empowerment, however little research has focussed specifically on understanding the types, obstacles and sources of empowerment in co-design. This paper combines theoretical investigations with obser... Read More about Types, obstacles and sources of empowerment in co-design: the role of shared material objects and processes.

The role of visual appearance in Punch’s early Victorian satires on religion (2014)
Journal Article
Janes. (2014). The role of visual appearance in Punch’s early Victorian satires on religion. Victorian Periodicals Review, 66-86. https://doi.org/10.1353/vpr.2014.0006

Satires on various aspects of contemporary religion are frequently found in early Victorian editions of Punch. The more strident forms of Protestant evangelicalism in the 1840s and Roman Catholic revivalism in the early 1850s came in for particular a... Read More about The role of visual appearance in Punch’s early Victorian satires on religion.

Gothic visions of classical architecture in Hablot Knight Browne’s dark illustrations for the novels of Charles Dickens
Journal Article
Janes. (2014). Gothic visions of classical architecture in Hablot Knight Browne’s dark illustrations for the novels of Charles Dickens. https://doi.org/10.7227/gs.16.2.3. Manuscript submitted for publication

In the early gothic literature of the eighteenth century danger lurked in the darkness beneath the pointed arches of gothic buildings. During the nineteenth century, there was a progressive, although never complete, dislocation of gothic literary rea... Read More about Gothic visions of classical architecture in Hablot Knight Browne’s dark illustrations for the novels of Charles Dickens.