Articles from:October 2025

  • Fall Preview Day to showcase Brock student experience

    MEDIA RELEASE — October 27,  2025 — R0127

     From teaching excellence and student supports to extracurriculars and hands-on learning opportunities, all that Brock University has to offer will be on display this weekend.

    The University will welcome thousands of prospective students and their families to take in the Brock experience during Fall Preview Day on Sunday, Nov. 2.

    Held from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., the event gives visitors an idea of what it’s like to be a part of Brock’s vibrant campus community.

    “Fall Preview helps potential Badgers see what their life would be like as a member of the Brock family,” says Carly Dugo, Senior Recruitment Officer, Events and Operations. “They can get a feel for the ways in which our staff, faculty and fellow students can help them on their path to success as they work to achieve their dreams.”

    The day will feature guided tours of the University’s main campus and the Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts in downtown St. Catharines, as well as specialty tours of residences, the Goodman School of Business and Brock’s sport and recreation facilities.

    Department tours and program presentations will also highlight Brock’s state-of-the-art facilities and its innovative academic opportunities.

    An information fair in Ian Beddis Gymnasium will include more than 70 booths supported by staff, faculty and students available to answer questions about programs, admissions, scholarships and awards, residences, and all other aspects of university life.

    “There is a lot to see and do while visiting campus, but our goal is to ensure each student receives answers to the questions they find the most personally valuable as they determine the next steps in their academic journey,” says Matthew Melnyk, Director, Student Recruitment. “We want our future students to know we’re here to support them every step of the way, and that begins with us highlighting why Brock may be the best fit for them.”

    Information sessions will be held throughout the day for soon-to-be high school graduates, Grade 10 and 11 students who are exploring their options early, and international, graduate, mature and transfer students.

    Prospective students who attend will also be entered into a draw for free residence for the 2026-27 academic year.

    For Sunday’s full event schedule and to register, visit Brock’s Fall Preview Day website.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews: 

    *Sarah Ackles, Communications Specialist, Brock University [email protected] or 289-241-5483

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Monsters in the mirror: Why spooky stories continue to thrill

    EXPERT ADVISORY– OCTOBER 27, 2025 – R0126

    As ghosts and ghouls rise from the dead to stake their annual claim to October’s pop culture crown, Brock University English Language and Literature experts are weighing in on society’s fascination with scary stories and why “monsters” continue to thrill.

    Associate Professor and Dean of Humanities James Allard says Gothic fiction, which originated in the 1700s, entertained mass audiences by using emotional and suspenseful storytelling techniques that are now hallmarks of many popular stories — and not just scary ones.

    “Establishing iconic figures like Frankenstein’s creature and Bram Stoker’s Dracula, Gothic literature laid the groundwork for today’s popular storytelling genres — think murder mysteries, detective fiction, romance and fantasy fiction,” he says.

    The success of the storytelling style, Allard says, is in part thanks to human emotional reactions, allowing readers to explore fear and other challenging feelings in a safe setting.

    “Whether it’s enjoying the suspense of a thriller or feeling scared watching a film with a blanket over your eyes, these stories allow us to feel emotions we may not want to feel otherwise,” he says.

    According to Allard, Gothic monsters are adaptable symbols functioning as whiteboards for society’s fears.

    “Later adaptations of Frankenstein’s experiment reflect fears of science and technology run amok with no consideration of morality; Dracula is a wealthy, gender non-conforming aristocrat who is at home both in a castle and in the dirt,” he says. “Contemporary authors and creators still grapple with these themes, and modern-day audiences still want to experience them.”

    Professor Martin Danahay agrees, pointing to Guillermo Del Toro’s forthcoming remake of Frankenstein, which Danahay believes will show Mary Shelley’s creature in a positive way.

    “Del Toro’s Frankenstein shows the enduring appeal of Gothic horror,” he says. “Del Toro is the perfect director for this film because he has always had a deep sympathy for ‘monsters’ whom he regards as outsiders rejected or oppressed by society.”

    Each generation revisits and rewrites monsters to reflect social anxieties of the era, says Professor Ann Howey, an expert in feminist adaptations of traditional tales.

    Female villains were historically written as elderly and ugly, and therefore dangerous, Howey says, reflecting patriarchal fears about women’s power, control, age and sexuality.

    Feminist adaptations of these characters emerged in the 1970s and ’80s. Marion Zimmer Bradley’s The Mists of Avalon, for example, retells Arthurian legends from the perspective of the female characters, particularly the sorceresses, Howey says.

    The trend gained momentum in the ’80s and ’90s with authors like Nora Roberts writing mainstream romance with a supernatural edge, positioning women’s paranormal powers as part of the female protagonist’s allure.

    Contemporary works, Howey adds, continue to reimagine women traditionally coded as villains, referencing popular mainstream shows like Buffy the Vampire Slayer and more recently, the global success of Sarah J. Maas’s A Court of Thorn and Roses series.

    “In these new storylines, witches or ‘chosen’ women with supernatural powers are billed as heroic leads,” she says.

    Allard, Howey and Danahay agree the current trends dominating genre fiction reflect an increasing cultural awareness of what constitutes evil and that society’s appetite for stories that explore fear, morality and identity continue to resonate through the ages.

    English Language and Literature Associate Professor James Allard and Professors Martin Danahay and Ann Howey are available for media interviews on this topic.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    *Sarah Ackles, Communications Specialist, Brock University [email protected] or 289-241-5483

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    Categories: Media releases