Since the early 1990s the twin leitmotifs of the European art house, and French cinema in particular, have been images of intense graphic violence and explicit sexuality. Scholars and critics generally refer to this phenomenon as a tendency toward "New Extremism" in cinema. In this dissertation, I demonstrate that the violence and sexuality in these films is neither "new" nor "extreme," but extends and expands upon the themes and elements of the modern American horror film. Historical context is largely missing from existing scholarship on these films and their representations of violence, and this project addresses this gap by drawing the violence characterizing post-Wall European art cinema and the violence of the modern American horror f...
My dissertation advances a new methodology for studying horror cinema, which I call “thinking throug...
In Making and Remaking Horror in the 1970s and 2000s author David Roche takes up the assumption shar...
Why can fear be pleasurable? Why do we sometimes enjoy an emotion we otherwise desperately wish to a...
This dissertation questions the aesthetic, affective, and ethical dimensions of the relationship bet...
This paper offers a broad historical overview of the ideology and cultural roots of horror films. Th...
This thesis explores depictions of suffering in American haunted house horror films and considers ho...
This qualitative thesis examines levels of pessimism as they relate to modern and postmodern horror ...
This article seeks to investigate this balance and to interrogate the difference between horror and ...
This dissertation explores how watching “Euro-horror”—the visceral and often surreal late-twentieth-...
This thesis examines horror films through an application of cultural analysis (primarily the work of...
AbstractFraming the Void: Trauma, Historical Erasure and the Excesses of HorrorbyKatherine Elizabeth...
Across the world, capitalist and neoliberal economic policies have trapped communities in chaotic cy...
International audienceIn Making and Remaking Horror in the 1970s and 2000s author David Roche takes ...
This dissertation aims to locate the power and popularity of contemporary horror films in terms of a...
Over the past half century, theorists have grappled with the issue that spectators engage with, and ...
My dissertation advances a new methodology for studying horror cinema, which I call “thinking throug...
In Making and Remaking Horror in the 1970s and 2000s author David Roche takes up the assumption shar...
Why can fear be pleasurable? Why do we sometimes enjoy an emotion we otherwise desperately wish to a...
This dissertation questions the aesthetic, affective, and ethical dimensions of the relationship bet...
This paper offers a broad historical overview of the ideology and cultural roots of horror films. Th...
This thesis explores depictions of suffering in American haunted house horror films and considers ho...
This qualitative thesis examines levels of pessimism as they relate to modern and postmodern horror ...
This article seeks to investigate this balance and to interrogate the difference between horror and ...
This dissertation explores how watching “Euro-horror”—the visceral and often surreal late-twentieth-...
This thesis examines horror films through an application of cultural analysis (primarily the work of...
AbstractFraming the Void: Trauma, Historical Erasure and the Excesses of HorrorbyKatherine Elizabeth...
Across the world, capitalist and neoliberal economic policies have trapped communities in chaotic cy...
International audienceIn Making and Remaking Horror in the 1970s and 2000s author David Roche takes ...
This dissertation aims to locate the power and popularity of contemporary horror films in terms of a...
Over the past half century, theorists have grappled with the issue that spectators engage with, and ...
My dissertation advances a new methodology for studying horror cinema, which I call “thinking throug...
In Making and Remaking Horror in the 1970s and 2000s author David Roche takes up the assumption shar...
Why can fear be pleasurable? Why do we sometimes enjoy an emotion we otherwise desperately wish to a...