2009
DOI: 10.1353/aim.0.0043
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Childhood and the Fear of Death in Ambrose Bierce's The Parenticide Club and "Visions of the Night"

Abstract: Ambrose Bierce, whose writings are replete with themes and images of violent death, is most remembered today for his Civil War short stories, and especially for the much anthologized "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge." A number of Bierce's tales and essays, however, feature family violence and parricide, suggesting that the author's obsessive concern with death may have earlier antecedents than his own experiences as a Union soldier in the Civil War. Broadening previous psychoanalytic approaches, this essay u… Show more

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