King’s Psychological Gothicism
53
Works Cited
Cartwright, Rosalind. “Sleepwalking Violence: A Sleep Disorder, a Legal
Dilemma, and a Psychological Challenge.” American Journal ofPsychiatry
161.7 (2004): 1149-1158.
Dement, William C. and Christopher Vaughan. The Promise o f Sleep. New
York: Random House Inc., 1999.
“Dissociative Disorder.” Glossary of Psychological Terms. American
Psychological Association. APA, 2002. Web. 12 February 2012.
Dobbert, Duane L. Understanding Personality Disorders. An Introduction.
Westport, Connecticut: Praeger, 2007.
Freud, Sigmund. On Dreams. 1952. Trans. James Strachey. London: W. W.
Norton, 1980.
—. The Interpretation o f Dreams. 1901. Trans. James Strachey. London:
Hogarth, 1995.
—. “Papers on Applied Psychoanalysis. The Uncanny.” 1919. CollectedPapers.
Trans. James Strachey. Vol. 4. London: Hogarth, 1949. 368-407.
Gibbs, Kenneth. “Stephen King and the Tradition of American Gothic.” Gothic
1 (1986): 6-14.
Homey, Karen. Our Inner Conflicts. A Constructive Theory o f Neurosis. New
York: W.W. Norton, 1945.
Kelly, William. Psychology o f the Unconscious. Mesmer; Janet, Freud, Jung,
and Current Issues. Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books, 1991.
King, Stephen. “Secret Window, Secret Garden.” FourPast Midnight. New
York: Signet, 2004. 235-382.
—. The Shining. 1978. New York, N.Y.: New American Library, 1977.
Lambert, Michelle. “The Spectrum of Organic Depersonalization: A Review
Plus Four New Cases.” The Journal o f Neuropsychiatry and Clinical
Neurosciences 14 (2002): 141-154.
Levin, Ross. “Disturbed Dreaming, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, and Affect
Distress: A Review and Neurocognitive Model.” Psychological
Bulletin 133.3 (2007): 482-528.
McKellar, Peter. Mindsplit: The Psychology o f Multiple Personality and the
Dissociated Seif London: Dent, 1979.
Moskowitz, Andrew. “Dissociation and Violence; A Review of the Literature.”
Trauma, Violence &Abuse 5 (2004): 21-46.
“Nightmare
Disorder.”
Encyclopedia
of
Mental
Disorders.
http ://www. minddisorders.com
Poe, Edgar Allan. “The Black Cat.” Tales o f Mystery and Imagination.
Pennsylvania: The Franklin Library, 1987. 187-197.
Reuber, Alexandra. “How to Use the Pop-Screen in Literary Studies.” Journal o f
College Teaching andLearning 7.8 (July 2010): 25-44.
—. “Identity Crisis and Personality Disorders in Edgar Allan Poe’s “William
Wilson” (1839), David Fincher’s Fight Club (1999), and James
Mangold’s Identity (2003). Adapting Poe: Re-Imaginings in Populär