@article{oai:osu.repo.nii.ac.jp:00002448, author = {金﨑, 茂樹 and KANASAKI, Shigeki}, journal = {大阪産業大学論集 人文・社会科学編, JOURNAL OF OSAKA SANGYO UNIVERSITY Humanities & Social Sciences}, month = {Mar}, note = {A considerable number of stories about mummies were written in the late Victorian and Edwardian eras and are generally divided into two types: love romances about English male characters falling in love with perfectly preserved and fascinating female mummies, and tales of horror featuring monstrous male mummies attacking or plotting against British people taking vengeance for the colonial sins committed by the British empire. The backdrop for these latter stories is British political and imperial power prevailing over Egypt from 1880s to 1910s. This paper analyzes the stories and male mummy characters in the fiction of W. W. Jacobs, “The Monkey’s Paw”(1902), Arthur Conan Doyle, “Lot No. 249” (1892), Guy Newell Boothby, Pharos the Egyptian: A Romance (1899), Richard Marsh, The Beetle: A Mystery (1897), and Ambrose Pratt, The Living Mummy (1910); and considers several characteristics of male mummies and compares them to differences found in female mummy stories.}, pages = {1--15}, title = {十九世紀末から二十世紀初頭における報復のミイラ・フィクション}, volume = {44}, year = {2022}, yomi = {カナサキ, シゲキ} }