
What is a monster? - University of Cambridge
Sep 7, 2015 · Making monsters added value. They were commercially lucrative things: oddities, curiosities and rare things were very marketable. The market for monstrosity motivated the literal creation of monsters: 'mermaids' were assembled from pieces of fish, monkeys and other objects while 'ray-dragons' were created from carefully mutilated and dried rays.
Outlaws, trolls and beserkers: meet the hero-monsters of the …
Oct 22, 2015 · It also tell us about monsters – for the literature of medieval Iceland is also rich in the paranormal. In mythology, gods and men fight against giants. In the sagas, humans battle the forces of disorder, the trolls and revenants – think a cross between a vampire and a zombie – that inhabit the wild mountains and highlands of Norway and ...
Opinion: Frankenstein or Krampus? What our monsters say about us
Dec 4, 2015 · One of the two monsters set to hit cinemas displays the dangers of hubristic human enterprise (Victor Frankenstein); the other provides a dark embodiment of Christmas-spirit gone awry (Krampus). Such monsters are images that embody the cultural or psychological characteristics that we as a society find difficult to acknowledge.
Monsters - University of Cambridge
Dec 4, 2015 · Outlaws, trolls and beserkers: meet the hero-monsters of the Icelandic sagas 22 Oct 2015 Rebecca Merkelbach (Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic) discusses the monstrous heroes of Scandinavian mythology and literature.
Articles about 'Monsters' - University of Cambridge
Sep 7, 2015 · Outlaws, trolls and beserkers: meet the hero-monsters of the Icelandic sagas 22 October 2015 Rebecca Merkelbach (Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic) discusses the monstrous heroes of Scandinavian mythology and literature.
Could this monster help you overcome anxiety? - University of …
Having played such classic PlayStation horror games as Resident Evil IV, I’m not unfamiliar with being terrified by monsters, but in that instance (a) I was not playing in virtual reality, where your sound and vision are completely immersed in the game; and (b) I could run away every time I heard the chanting of rabid monks approaching.
Earth’s earliest sea creatures drove evolution by stirring the water ...
May 17, 2024 · 3D reconstructions suggest that simple marine animals living over 560 million years ago drove the emergence of more complex life by mixing the seawater around
folklore - University of Cambridge
Sep 19, 2023 · What our monsters say about us 04 Dec 2015. Natalie Lawrence (Department of History and Philosophy of ...
Mammals vs dinosaurs - University of Cambridge
Mar 15, 2013 · In the Permian period, for example (roughly 298 to 252 million years ago), we have evidence of animals such as Gorgonopsids - large, carnivorous, four-legged monsters with long, sabre-like fangs, strong rear legs, and a vaulted palate that allowed them to breathe when they grabbed their prey. The biggest was roughly the size of a large bear.
Unexpected experiences - University of Cambridge
What links two large furry Loch Ness Monsters, key-cards, and donning a gown to eat pot noodles? The answer is the unexpected creativity that blossomed in a time of coronavirus, says Catherine Arnold, Master of St Edmund’s College. Let’s put that “unexpected” into context. A year ago this week, I was inaugurated as St Edmund’s 15th ...
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