|
Showing 1 - 25 of
27 matches in All Departments
"We live in an age defined by toxicity. Bacon and the contributors
have produced a timely, astute collection that intelligently and
creatively engages and analyzes the wide panoply of trauma and
poisoned discourse. Entertaining, fascinating and, honestly,
terrifying, this book is paradoxically a delight and purgative to
read! An antidote to the very thing it explores." (Professor Kevin
J. Wetmore, Jr., author of Post-9/11 Horror in American Cinema)
What is Toxic? This volume provides a timely and original
examination of the concept of "toxic" that today seems to inform
all areas of popular culture and society. Connoting many forms of
negativity, denial or disillusion, "toxic" has become central to
the experience of living in the twenty-first century. Comprising
twenty-nine original essays by experts in their fields, this
collection offers something of a guide to how areas of toxicity
often overlap and/or inform other ones. Topics as diverse as "fake
news", environmental denialism, toxic nostalgia, deep fakes, Black
Lives Matter, #MeToo and cancel culture are covered. Studied texts
include popular culture from the film Get Out (2018) to the Pussy
Hat Movement, from social media "sadfishing" to governmental
responses to the Covid-19 pandemic. This companion unravels the
often purposely entangled narratives that are used to fuel much
cultural and political populism. It serves as an important
intervention into the conversations occurring around extreme
partisanship and divisive views on where we might be heading and
how dystopian the future will really be.
Examining fictional purgatorial worlds in contemporary literature,
film and video games, this book examines the way in which the
female characters trapped within them construct identity positions
of resistance and change. With the rise of populism, the Alt.
Right, and isolationism in world politics in the second decade of
the 21st Century, parallel, purgatorial worlds seem to currently
proliferate within popular culture across all media, including
television shows and films such as The Handmaids Tale, Us,
Watchmen, and Margaret Atwood's The Testaments among many others.
These texts depict alternate worlds that express the darkness and
violence of our own, arguably none more so than for women.
Featuring essays from a broad range of international contributors
on topics as wide-ranging as mental health in the Silent Hill
franchise and liminal spaces in the work of David Mitchell, this
book is an original, timely and hope-filled analysis about
overcoming the confines of a patriarchal, fundamentalist world
where the female imaginative might just be the last, best hope.
What are Monsters? Monsters are everywhere, from cyberbullies
online to vampires onscreen: the twenty-first century is a
monstrous age. The root of the word "monster" means "omen" or
"warning", and if monsters frighten us, it's because they are here
to warn us about something amiss in ourselves and in our society.
Humanity has given birth to these monsters, and they grow and
change with us, carrying the scars of their birth with them. This
collection of original and accessible essays looks at a variety of
contemporary monsters from literature, film, television, music and
the internet within their respective historical and cultural
contexts. Beginning with a critical introduction that explores the
concept of the monster in the work of Jeffrey Jerome Cohen, Jack
Halberstam, Elaine Showalter and more, the book takes a broad
approach to the monster, including not only classic slasher films,
serial killers (Bates Motel), the living dead (Game of Thrones) and
aliens (District 9), but also hyper-contemporary examples like
clones (Orphan Black), cyberbullies (Cyberbully), viral outbreaks
(The Strain) and celebrities (Lady Gaga). Gender and culture are
especially emphasized in the volume, with essays on the role of
gender and sexuality in defining the monster (AHS Apocalypse) and
global monsters (Cleverman, La Llorona). This compact guide to the
monster in contemporary culture will be useful to teachers,
students and fans looking to expand their understanding of this
important cultural figure.
Themes of faith and religion have been threaded through popular
representations of the zombie so often that they now seem
inextricably linked. Whether as mindless servants to a Vodou Bokor
or as evidence of the impending apocalypse, the ravenous undead
have long captured something of society's relationships with
spirituality, religion and belief. By the start of the 21st
century, religious beliefs are as varied as the many manifestations
of the zombie itself, and both themes intersect with various
ideological, environmental and even post-human concerns. This book
surveys the various modern religious associations in zombie media.
Some characters believe that the undead are part of God's plan,
others theorize that the environment might be saving itself or that
zombies might be predicting life and hybridity beyond human
existence. Timely and important, this work is a meditation on how
faith might not just be a forerunner to the apocalypse, but the
catalyst to new kinds of life beyond it.
What is Transmedia? The Transmedia Cultures companion demonstrates
that transmedia, and indeed transmedia storytelling, are
fundamental to the human experience of being in the world and
creating the stories of who we are, both as individuals and
communities. Transmedia is not just limited to the Star Wars or
Harry Potter franchises nor narratives exclusive to new media
platforms and devices, though both these areas will necessarily be
discussed. Indeed, transmedia embraces a multiplicity of media
platforms (old and new, online and offline), content expansion, and
evolving forms of audience engagement. This collection of concise,
readable essays takes a holistic approach, expanding the areas of
everyday life implicated in transmedia worldbuilding and the levels
of immersion that they, purposely or otherwise, create. Beginning
with a comprehensive introduction and historical overview, the
volume explores contemporary transmedia worlds like Buffy the
Vampire Slayer, The Walking Dead, Life is Strange and BTS Universe
as well as urgent topics such as COVID-19, Black Lives Matter, and
human rights on the internet. User-created worlds (Magic: A
Gathering) and ones that express individual identities (Queerskins)
are also of particular interest. This volume offers a fresh
approach to transmedia cultures, revealing the ever-increasing
levels of entanglement they have within our real lives and with
those we experience in other more imaginative or creative ones,
bringing into focus exactly what is at stake in the "worlds" we
choose to call our own.
This book begins at the intersection of Dracula and War of the
Worlds, both published in 1897 London, and describes the settings
of Transylvania, Mars, and London as worlds linked by the body of
the vampire. It explores the "vampire from another world" in all
its various forms, as a manifestation of not just our anxieties
around alien others, but also our alien selves. Unsurprisingly,
many of the tropes these novels generated and particularly the
themes they have in common have been used and adapted by vampire
narratives that followed. From Nosferatu to Alien, Interstellar,
Stranger Things, and many others, this book examines how these
narratives have evolved since the end of the nineteenth century.
Bringing together texts and films from across the 19th, 20th, and
21st centuries, from the far reaches of outer space and the distant
future, it concludes that the unexpected and the unknown are not
always to be feared, and that humanity does have the power to write
its own future.
Becoming Vampire is an interdisciplinary study of how the figure of
the vampire in the twenty-first century has been used to create and
define difference, not as either a positive or negative attribute,
but as a catalyst for change and the exploration of new identity
positions. Whilst focusing on the films Let Me In and Let the Right
One In to highlight the referential and intertextual nature of the
genre itself, it utilises a broad spectrum of methodological
approaches to show how the many facets of the vampire can
destabilise traditional categories of who we are and what we might
become. This volume then provides a timely examination of the
multifaceted and multivalent character of the vampire and the
possibilities inherent within our interactions with them, making
this study a consideration of what we might term 'vampiric
becomings' and an exploration of why the undead 'creatures of the
night' remain so fascinating to Western culture.
«Beyond the narrow application to the pop-cultural zombie, Simon
Bacon’s editorial definition of the concept of being «undead»
generates discussions in each chapter that creatively engage with
the full agenda of critical debates in studies of horror and the
gothic. With each chapter, the book unpacks the dense implications
of its key concept, as it explores what it means to be undead, to
determine who is and who isn’t, and how this matters. The book
earns its rewards as a «Companion» in the true sense of the term
since it is sure to accompany many curious and critical journeys
through undead twenty-first-century culture.» (Professor Steffen
Hantke, Sogang University, Seoul, author of Monsters in the
Machine: Science Fiction Film and the Militarization of America
after World War II) Who are the Undead? The twenty-first century is
truly the age of the undead. They are no longer just vampires or
zombies, but every kind of monster that can be imagined. More so,
they not only live in the alien terrain of our imaginations or
nightmares but are embedded into the very nature of our existence
in the neverending catastrophe of the 2000s. Featuring leading
scholars such as David Punter, Roger Luckhurst, Jeffrey Andrew
Weinstock and Lorna Piatti-Farnell amongst many others, the 30
original essays in The Undead in the 21st Century: A Companion
describe and explain how the various fears and anxieties we have
around such things as contagion, the environment, geopolitics and
even ageing give form to the multifarious undead that plague our
existence and seem bent on our destruction. However, as shall be
argued here, if we can recognise and understand the undead they
might not be the end of humanity as we know it, but possibly a way
to exist beyond it.
Future Folk Horror: Contemporary Anxieties and Possible Futures
analyzes folk horror by looking at its recent popularity in novels
and films such as The Witch (2015), and Candyman (2021). Countering
traditional views of the genre as depictions of the monstrous,
rural, and pagan past trying to consume the present, the
contributors to this collection posit folk horror as being able to
uniquely capture the anxieties of the twenty-first century, caused
by an ongoing pandemic and the divisive populist politics that have
arisen around it. Further, this book shows how, through its
increasing intersections with other genres such as science fiction,
the weird, and eco-criticism as seen in films and texts like The
Zero Theorum (2013), The Witcher (2007–21), and Annihilation
(2018) as well as through its engagement with topics around climate
change, racism, and identity politics, folk horror can point to
other ways of being in the world and visions of possible futures.
This book is the logical continuation of a series of collected
essays examining the origins and evolution of myths and legends of
the supernatural in Western and non-Western tradition and popular
culture. The first two volumes of the series, The Universal
Vampire: Origins and Evolution of a Legend (Fairleigh Dickinson
University Press, 2013) and Images of the Modern Vampire: The Hip
and the Atavistic. (Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2013)
focused on the vampire legend. The essays in this collection expand
that scope to include a multicultural and multigeneric discussion
of a pantheon of supernatural creatures who interact and cross
species-specific boundaries with ease. Angels and demons are
discussed from the perspective of supernatural allegory, angelic
ethics and supernatural heredity and genetics. Fairies, sorcerers,
witches and werewolves are viewed from the perspectives of popular
nightmare tales, depictions of race and ethnicity, popular public
discourse and cinematic imagery. Discussions of the "undead and
still dead" include images of death messengers and draugar, zombies
and vampires in literature, popular media and Japanese anime.
In 2016, Star Trek-arguably the most popular science fiction
franchise of all time-turned 50. During that time the original
series and its various offshoots have created some of the genre's
most iconic characters and reiterated a vision of an egalitarian
future where humans no longer discriminate against race, gender or
sexuality. This collection of new essays provides a timely study of
how well Star Trek has lived up to its own ideals of inclusivity
and equality, and how well prepared it is to boldly go with
everyone into the next half century.
Gothic Afterlives examines the intersecting dimensions of
contemporary Gothic horror and remakes scholarship, bringing
together innovative perspectives from different areas of study. The
research compiled in this collection covers a wide range of
examples, including not only literature but also film, television,
video games, and digital media remakes. Gothic Afterlives signals
the cultural and conceptual impact of Gothic horror on transmedia
production, with a focus on reimagining and remaking. While diverse
in content and approach, all chapters pivot on two important
points: first, they reflect some of the core preoccupations of
Gothic horror by subverting cultural and social certainties about
notions such as the body, technology, consumption, human nature,
digitalization, scientific experimentation, national identity,
memory, and gender and by challenging the boundaries between human
and inhuman, self and Other, and good and evil. Second, and perhaps
most important, all chapters in the collection collectively show
what happens when well-known Gothic horror narratives are adapted
and remade into different contexts, highlighting the implications
of the mode-shifting registers, platforms, and chronologies in the
process. As a collection, Gothic Afterlives hones in on
contemporary sociocultural experiences and identities as they
appear in contemporary popular culture and in the stories told and
retold in the twenty-first century.
This book examines how the vampire has always been connected to
ideas of infection, pollution and disease—even more so in the
21st century where it expresses the horrors of unseen and
unstoppable disease and the foreboding and anxiety that accompany
viral outbreaks and wider epidemics. Here the vampire gives
physical form to the contagion and associated anxieties around the
perceived causes and spread of disease, where it can take on many
forms from animal to pestilential particulate matter, creeping
shadows and even malignant weather systems. If blood is life, it is
the body of the vampire that is death. This timely study looks at
how and why the vampire continues to fulfil this function and
posits that the true patient zero in the 21st century is no longer
the dangerous, ancient, outsider from the East but is the undying
monster that is Western culture itself.
This work studies the ways vampiric narratives explore the
eco-friendly credentials of the undead. Many of these texts and
films show the vampire to be an essential part of a global
ecosystem and an organism that can no longer tolerate the
all-consuming forces of globalization and consumerism. This book
will re-examine Bram Stoker's Dracula and its various kith and kin
to reveal how the nosferatu are both a plague on humankind and the
eco-warriors that planet Earth desperately needs.
Finalist, 2021 Bram Stoker Awards (Superior Achievement in
Non-Fiction) The first collection of essays to address Satan's
ubiquitous and popular appearances in film Lucifer and cinema have
been intertwined since the origins of the medium. As humankind's
greatest antagonist and the incarnation of pure evil, the cinematic
devil embodies our own culturally specific anxieties and desires,
reflecting moviegoers' collective conceptions of good and evil,
right and wrong, sin and salvation. Giving the Devil His Due is the
first book of its kind to examine the history and significance of
Satan onscreen. This collection explores how the devil is not just
one monster among many, nor is he the "prince of darkness" merely
because he has repeatedly flickered across cinema screens in
darkened rooms since the origins of the medium. Satan is instead a
force active in our lives. Films featuring the devil, therefore,
are not just flights of fancy but narratives, sometimes
reinforcing, sometimes calling into question, a familiar belief
system. From the inception of motion pictures in the 1890s and
continuing into the twenty-first century, these essays examine what
cinematic representations tell us about the art of filmmaking, the
desires of the film-going public, what the cultural moments of the
films reflect, and the reciprocal influence they exert. Loosely
organized chronologically by film, though some chapters address
more than one film, this collection studies such classic movies as
Faust, Rosemary's Baby, The Omen, Angel Heart, The Witch, and The
Last Temptation of Christ, as well as the appearance of the Devil
in Disney animation. Guiding the contributions to this volume is
the overarching idea that cinematic representations of Satan
reflect not only the hypnotic powers of cinema to explore and
depict the fantastic but also shifting social anxieties and desires
that concern human morality and our place in the universe.
Contributors: Simon Bacon, Katherine A. Fowkes, Regina Hansen,
David Hauka, Russ Hunter, Barry C. Knowlton, Eloise R. Knowlton,
Murray Leeder, Catherine O'Brien, R. Barton Palmer, Carl H.
Sederholm, David Sterritt, J. P. Telotte, Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock
Growing Up with Vampires is the first book to focus solely on the
figure of the vampire in print, film, and other media specifically
meant for pre-teen children. Whilst narratives about the undead are
often considered suitable only for adults, there is a long history
of their appearance in material meant for children. Although the
essays in this collection mainly consider examples from Western
culture in the 20th and 21st centuries they provide an important
and accessible roadmap of when vampires became popular in
children's media, how to explore the ways in which vampires are
used, what they might symbolize, and what their ultimate meaning or
significance might be. Vampires are never what they quite seem: in
stories for children they are just as likely to be an expression of
anxiety around change, growing up, aging and the unfamiliar as they
are to be the new best friend who will make you realize just how
special difference and individuality are. Growing Up with Vampires
is an ideal introduction for those new to the topic and an
invaluable resource to readers looking to gain further insight into
vampires in/and children's media.
Gothic Afterlives examines the intersecting dimensions of
contemporary Gothic horror and remakes scholarship, bringing
together innovative perspectives from different areas of study. The
research compiled in this collection covers a wide range of
examples, including not only literature but also film, television,
video games, and digital media remakes. Gothic Afterlives signals
the cultural and conceptual impact of Gothic horror on transmedia
production, with a focus on reimagining and remaking. While diverse
in content and approach, all chapters pivot on two important
points: first, they reflect some of the core preoccupations of
Gothic horror by subverting cultural and social certainties about
notions such as the body, technology, consumption, human nature,
digitalization, scientific experimentation, national identity,
memory, and gender and by challenging the boundaries between human
and inhuman, self and Other, and good and evil. Second, and perhaps
most important, all chapters in the collection collectively show
what happens when well-known Gothic horror narratives are adapted
and remade into different contexts, highlighting the implications
of the mode-shifting registers, platforms, and chronologies in the
process. As a collection, Gothic Afterlives hones in on
contemporary sociocultural experiences and identities as they
appear in contemporary popular culture and in the stories told and
retold in the twenty-first century.
Dark, dangerous and transgressive, Bram Stoker's Dracula is often
read as Victorian society's absolute Other-an outsider who troubles
and distracts those around him, representative of the fears and
anxieties of the age. This book is a study of Dracula's role of
absolute Other as it appears on screen, and an investigation of
popular culture's continued fascination with vampires. Drawing on
vampire films spanning from the early 20th century to today, this
book is an examination of how different generations construct
Otherness and how this reflects in vampire media.
Finalist, 2021 Bram Stoker Awards (Superior Achievement in
Non-Fiction) The first collection of essays to address Satan's
ubiquitous and popular appearances in film Lucifer and cinema have
been intertwined since the origins of the medium. As humankind's
greatest antagonist and the incarnation of pure evil, the cinematic
devil embodies our own culturally specific anxieties and desires,
reflecting moviegoers' collective conceptions of good and evil,
right and wrong, sin and salvation. Giving the Devil His Due is the
first book of its kind to examine the history and significance of
Satan onscreen. This collection explores how the devil is not just
one monster among many, nor is he the "prince of darkness" merely
because he has repeatedly flickered across cinema screens in
darkened rooms since the origins of the medium. Satan is instead a
force active in our lives. Films featuring the devil, therefore,
are not just flights of fancy but narratives, sometimes
reinforcing, sometimes calling into question, a familiar belief
system. From the inception of motion pictures in the 1890s and
continuing into the twenty-first century, these essays examine what
cinematic representations tell us about the art of filmmaking, the
desires of the film-going public, what the cultural moments of the
films reflect, and the reciprocal influence they exert. Loosely
organized chronologically by film, though some chapters address
more than one film, this collection studies such classic movies as
Faust, Rosemary's Baby, The Omen, Angel Heart, The Witch, and The
Last Temptation of Christ, as well as the appearance of the Devil
in Disney animation. Guiding the contributions to this volume is
the overarching idea that cinematic representations of Satan
reflect not only the hypnotic powers of cinema to explore and
depict the fantastic but also shifting social anxieties and desires
that concern human morality and our place in the universe.
Contributors: Simon Bacon, Katherine A. Fowkes, Regina Hansen,
David Hauka, Russ Hunter, Barry C. Knowlton, Eloise R. Knowlton,
Murray Leeder, Catherine O'Brien, R. Barton Palmer, Carl H.
Sederholm, David Sterritt, J. P. Telotte, Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock
'Nosferatu' in the 21st Century is a celebration and a critical
study of F. W. Murnau's seminal vampire film Nosferatu, eine
Symphonie des Grauens on the 100th anniversary of its release in
1922. The movie remains a dark mirror to the troubled world we live
in seeing it as striking and important in the 2020s as it was a
century ago. The unmistakable image of Count Orlok has traveled
from his dilapidated castle in old world Transylvania into the
futuristic depths of outerspace in Star Trek and beyond as the
all-consuming shadow of the vampire spreads ever wider throughout
contemporary popular culture. This innovative collection of essays,
with a foreword by renowned Dracula expert Gary D. Rhodes, brings
together experts in the field alongside creative artists to explore
the ongoing impact of Murnau's groundbreaking movie as it has been
adapted, reinterpreted, and recreated across multiple mediums from
theatre, performance and film, to gaming, music and even drag. As
such, 'Nosferatu' in the 21st Century is not only a timely and
essential book about Murnau's film but also illuminates the times
that produced it and the world it continues to influence.
The Evolution of Horror in the Twenty-First Century examines the
intimate connections between the horror genre and its audience's
experience of being in the world at a particular historical and
cultural moment. This book not only provides frameworks with which
to understand contemporary horror, but it also speaks to the
changes wrought by technological development in creation,
production, and distribution, as well as the ways in which those
who are traditionally underrepresented positively within the genre-
women, LGBTQ+, indigenous, and BAME communities - are finally being
seen and finding space to speak.
Famous for being deathly serious, the vampire genre has a
consistent yet often critically overlooked subgenre-the comedic
spoof and satire. This is the first book dedicated entirely to
documenting and analyzing the vampire comedy on film and
television. Various types of comedy are discussed, outlining the
important differences between spoofing, serious-spoofing, parody
and satire. Seminal films such as Abbott and Costello Meet
Frankenstein, Love at First Bite, Vampire in Brooklyn, Dracula:
Dead and Loving It and What We Do In the Shadows are featured. More
importantly, this book demonstrates how comedy is central to both
the common perception of the vampire and the genre's ever-evolving
character, making it an essential read for those interested in the
laughing undead and creatures that guffaw in the night.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R398
R369
Discovery Miles 3 690
|