The horror genre (in film, literature etc.) has, for its seemingly paradoxical aesthetic appeal, been the subject of much debate in contemporary, analytic philosophy of art. At the same time, however, the nature of horror as an affective phenomenon has been largely neglected by both aestheticians and philosophers of mind. The standard view of the affective nature of horror in contemporary philosophy follows Noël Carroll in holding that horror in art (or “art-horror”) is an emotion resulting from the combination of disgust and fear. The view is also often accompanied by the view that horror in art is a distinct affect from horror in real life. This raises the question of what the re...
Horror has historically been mired in the conceptual swamp of negative affect. Because its basal mea...
I sought to explain why many people willingly expose themselves to apparently unpleasant media, such...
The purpose of this paper is to show that the shape of the dispute over a central issue in the philo...
The horror genre (in film, literature etc.) has, for its seemingly paradoxical aesthetic appeal, bee...
Noël Carroll’s influence on the contemporary debate on the horror genre is hard to overestimate. His...
Horror is a relatively new emotion. It is based on the subversion of a scientific account of the wor...
This thesis is concerned with art and emotion, and horror fiction in particular. I criticize a theor...
This article explores the relationship between existentialism and the horror genre. Noël Carroll and...
“It seems an unaccountable pleasure which the spectators of a well-written tragedy receive from sorr...
Over the past half century, theorists have grappled with the issue that spectators engage with, and ...
Why is horror so absent from the American stage? How can contemporary theatre makers go about creati...
This thesis suggests the possibility that psychoanalytic frameworks may prove insufficient to appreh...
This thesis explores the emotional experience of reading horror fiction from a cognitive-poetic pers...
We usually define “fear” as a negative emotion, which is unpleasant. Normally, we desperately want t...
Why does the horror genre serve as a source of pleasure, given its aim to induce fear in the audienc...
Horror has historically been mired in the conceptual swamp of negative affect. Because its basal mea...
I sought to explain why many people willingly expose themselves to apparently unpleasant media, such...
The purpose of this paper is to show that the shape of the dispute over a central issue in the philo...
The horror genre (in film, literature etc.) has, for its seemingly paradoxical aesthetic appeal, bee...
Noël Carroll’s influence on the contemporary debate on the horror genre is hard to overestimate. His...
Horror is a relatively new emotion. It is based on the subversion of a scientific account of the wor...
This thesis is concerned with art and emotion, and horror fiction in particular. I criticize a theor...
This article explores the relationship between existentialism and the horror genre. Noël Carroll and...
“It seems an unaccountable pleasure which the spectators of a well-written tragedy receive from sorr...
Over the past half century, theorists have grappled with the issue that spectators engage with, and ...
Why is horror so absent from the American stage? How can contemporary theatre makers go about creati...
This thesis suggests the possibility that psychoanalytic frameworks may prove insufficient to appreh...
This thesis explores the emotional experience of reading horror fiction from a cognitive-poetic pers...
We usually define “fear” as a negative emotion, which is unpleasant. Normally, we desperately want t...
Why does the horror genre serve as a source of pleasure, given its aim to induce fear in the audienc...
Horror has historically been mired in the conceptual swamp of negative affect. Because its basal mea...
I sought to explain why many people willingly expose themselves to apparently unpleasant media, such...
The purpose of this paper is to show that the shape of the dispute over a central issue in the philo...