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Reading Vampire Gothic Through Blood examines the manifestations of
blood and vampires in various texts and contexts. It seeks to
connect, through blood, fictional to real-life vampires to trace
similarities, differences and discontinuities. These movements will
be seen to parallel changing notions about embodiment and identity
in culture.
This book examines the manifestations of materiality across
different gothic media to show the inhuman at the heart of
literature, film and contemporary media, outlining a philosophy of
horror that deals with the horror of the nonhuman, the machine and
the nonorganic. The author explores how materiality lends itself
ideally to discussions of gothic and horror and acts as a threat to
attempts to control meaning which falls outside the realm of
consciousness. It brings the two together by examining the
manifestations of this materiality to focus on a form of horror
that is concerned with the (in) human by reading blood as the
conduit of an unnameable materiality that circulates through gothic
media, seducing with its familiar mask of gothic aesthetics only to
uncover the horror of a totally alienating and inhuman otherness.
Film, media, popular culture, philosophy and nineteenth-century
literature are brought together and juxtaposed to create a
continuity of ideas, and highlighting differences. The book offers
innovative readings of notions of blood inscription in different
media, of the Dark Web, accelerationism and technoscience to
account for the widespread haemophilia in contemporary culture.
This title is an essential read for researchers, undergraduate and
postgraduate students in film studies, media studies, literature,
philosophy, cultural theory and popular culture. Its
interdisciplinary nature, clear exposition of thought and
theoretical ideas will make it a key resource for both students and
for general readers with an interest in contemporary horror, media
and pop culture.
This book examines the manifestations of materiality across
different gothic media to show the inhuman at the heart of
literature, film and contemporary media, outlining a philosophy of
horror that deals with the horror of the nonhuman, the machine and
the nonorganic. The author explores how materiality lends itself
ideally to discussions of gothic and horror and acts as a threat to
attempts to control meaning which falls outside the realm of
consciousness. It brings the two together by examining the
manifestations of this materiality to focus on a form of horror
that is concerned with the (in) human by reading blood as the
conduit of an unnameable materiality that circulates through gothic
media, seducing with its familiar mask of gothic aesthetics only to
uncover the horror of a totally alienating and inhuman otherness.
Film, media, popular culture, philosophy and nineteenth-century
literature are brought together and juxtaposed to create a
continuity of ideas, and highlighting differences. The book offers
innovative readings of notions of blood inscription in different
media, of the Dark Web, accelerationism and technoscience to
account for the widespread haemophilia in contemporary culture.
This title is an essential read for researchers, undergraduate and
postgraduate students in film studies, media studies, literature,
philosophy, cultural theory and popular culture. Its
interdisciplinary nature, clear exposition of thought and
theoretical ideas will make it a key resource for both students and
for general readers with an interest in contemporary horror, media
and pop culture.
Reading Vampire Gothic Through Blood examines the manifestations of
blood and vampires in various texts and contexts. It seeks to
connect, through blood, fictional to real-life vampires to trace
similarities, differences and discontinuities. These movements will
be seen to parallel changing notions about embodiment and identity
in culture.
Glossator: Practice and Theory of the Commentary Volume 6 (2012)
-Black Metal Editors: Nicola Masciandaro & Reza Negarestani Of
Plications: A Short Summa on the Nature of Cascadian Black Metal -
Steven Shakespeare Black Metal and the Mouth: Always Serving You as
a Meal, or, Infected Orality, Pestilential Wounds and Scars -
Aspasia Stephanou The Blackish Green of the Greenish Black, or, The
Earth's Coruscating Darkness - Ben Woodard Day of Wrath - Eugene
Thacker Appendix: Abstracts - Manabrata Guha, Reza Negarestani,
Benjamin Noys, Zachary Price, James Trafford
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