Despite the Gothic’s much-discussed resurgence in mainstream American culture, the role the late 2000s financial crisis played in sustaining this renaissance has garnered insufficient critical attention. This article finds the Gothic tradition deployed in contemporary American narrative film to explore the impact of economic crisis and threat, and especially masculine anxieties about a perceived incapacity of men and fathers to protect vulnerable families and homes. Variously invoking the American and Southern Gothics, Take Shelter (2011) and Winter’s Bone (2010) represent how the domestic-everyday was made unfamiliar, unsettling and threatening in the face of metaphorical and real (socio-)economic crisis and disorder. The films’ explicit e...
Hockey (1999) introduces the House of Doom; Bailey (1999) builds the Haunted House formula from Amer...
From the 2007 remake of Michael Haneke’s Funny Games to Adam Robitel’s Escape Room (2019), the survi...
9/11 attacks open the 21st Century into the fear of the Other, which is coincidentally at the core ...
Despite the Gothic's much-discussed resurgence in mainstream American culture, the role the lat...
This article considers films that portray negative mobility and domicide in the wake of the housing ...
In this article, I propose that the haunted house narrative, so central to American Gothic, has itse...
This article aims to discuss the 1984 slasher film A Nightmare on Elm Street and its 2010 remake wit...
This thesis is focused on the intersection between horror, gender and politics in American haunted h...
The article explores the way American author Cormac McCarthy uses the Gothic genre in his novel The ...
This article discusses the 1984 slasher ilm A Nightmare on Elm Street and its 2010 remake emphasizin...
Crisis defines the present cultural moment. From the environment, through migration, to democracy, a...
Gothic fiction is associated with death, drama, and fear, often combining doomed romance with villai...
Al Qaeda killings, posttraumatic stress, and the Gothic together triangulate a sizable space in rece...
This article examines the role of urban imaginaries in filmic and photographic portrayals of the fin...
An article applying the movements of horror and terror in Gothic fiction to the shift from trau...
Hockey (1999) introduces the House of Doom; Bailey (1999) builds the Haunted House formula from Amer...
From the 2007 remake of Michael Haneke’s Funny Games to Adam Robitel’s Escape Room (2019), the survi...
9/11 attacks open the 21st Century into the fear of the Other, which is coincidentally at the core ...
Despite the Gothic's much-discussed resurgence in mainstream American culture, the role the lat...
This article considers films that portray negative mobility and domicide in the wake of the housing ...
In this article, I propose that the haunted house narrative, so central to American Gothic, has itse...
This article aims to discuss the 1984 slasher film A Nightmare on Elm Street and its 2010 remake wit...
This thesis is focused on the intersection between horror, gender and politics in American haunted h...
The article explores the way American author Cormac McCarthy uses the Gothic genre in his novel The ...
This article discusses the 1984 slasher ilm A Nightmare on Elm Street and its 2010 remake emphasizin...
Crisis defines the present cultural moment. From the environment, through migration, to democracy, a...
Gothic fiction is associated with death, drama, and fear, often combining doomed romance with villai...
Al Qaeda killings, posttraumatic stress, and the Gothic together triangulate a sizable space in rece...
This article examines the role of urban imaginaries in filmic and photographic portrayals of the fin...
An article applying the movements of horror and terror in Gothic fiction to the shift from trau...
Hockey (1999) introduces the House of Doom; Bailey (1999) builds the Haunted House formula from Amer...
From the 2007 remake of Michael Haneke’s Funny Games to Adam Robitel’s Escape Room (2019), the survi...
9/11 attacks open the 21st Century into the fear of the Other, which is coincidentally at the core ...