Reisenleitner, MarkusBeghetto, Robert Gerald2021-07-062021-07-062020-052021-07-06http://hdl.handle.net/10315/38413As modernity began to rapidly change and influence European culture, many nineteenth and twentieth-century writers and intellectuals struggled to identify themselves with this modern paradoxical context. As a result, the modern stranger was conjured up out of the uncanny depths of secularized modernity. Although a subject whose makeup is continually shifting, the modern stranger still exists as a strong allegory for secularized modernity, particularly because of its unsolidified and liminal characteristics. Along with its doppelgnger the monster, the stranger reflects not only uncanny otherness but the horrors and anxiety of realizing the potential imperfections and weaknesses of the individual, society, and their utopian imaginings. My project investigates the paradoxical, utopian and negative-utopian makeup of the modern stranger as an outcome of secularizing and modernizing changes in what is typically regarded as Western, predominately European, Judeo-Christian culture and history, beginning with the advent of modernity. By examining the liminal sphere located between the secular and sacred that I argue has characterized modernity itself, the study showcases the transformation of the stranger from something external into a figure far more liminal, which is forced to traverse uncanny space in an attempt to find new meanings for an age.Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.PhilosophyMonstrous Liminality; or the Uncanny Strangers of Secularized ModernityElectronic Thesis or Dissertation2021-07-06modern strangerliminalmodernityresacralizationsecularizationuncannymonsterspectrecyborggenderWWIcomparative literaturecyberspaceboredomartificial reality