1 / 16

Marija Dalbello Reading Interests of Adults Horror

Image credit: Victor GAD. Marija Dalbello Reading Interests of Adults Horror. Rutgers School of Communication and Information dalbello@rutgers.edu. Overview _______________________________________ Introduction What is Horror? Genre characteristics and appeal

gettys
Download Presentation

Marija Dalbello Reading Interests of Adults Horror

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Image credit: Victor GAD Marija Dalbello Reading Interests of Adults Horror Rutgers School of Communication and Informationdalbello@rutgers.edu

  2. Overview • _______________________________________ • Introduction • What is Horror? • Genre characteristics and appeal • “The Formula” and narrative models • History and types • Conclusion

  3. What is horror • Definition _______________________________________ • Horror is not a genre, like the mystery or science fiction or the western. It is not a kind of fiction, meant to be confined to the ghetto of a special shelf in libraries or bookstores. Horror is an emotion. • Horror Writers Association at: http://www.horror.org

  4. What is horror? • _______________________________________ • Suspension of disbelief and unique emotional experience • Post Enlightenment literary phenomenon • Horror is about knowledge as theme • Horror is about cosmic fear • Monsters are incidental • The politics of horror

  5. What is Horror • Suspension of disbelief _______________________________________ • “Paradoxes of the heart” • How can anyone be frightened by what they know does not exist? • Why would anyone ever be interested in horror, since being horrified is so unpleasant? • Why are people attracted to unpleasant emotions? • Art horror - Natural horror • Emotion caused by the characteristic structures, imagery, and figures in the genre (art) • Emotion caused by reality (natural) • Speculative fiction genre • Partial explanations

  6. What is Horror • Post Enlightenment phenomenon_______________________________________ • Reaction to the culture of post Enlightenment secular rationality (Carroll, p. 162) • The effects of the Englightenment: • Religious feeling in our culture was demeaned by “materialistic sophistication” • Intuition is denied by the culture of materialistic sophistication • Instinctual attraction and capacity for awe • Horror evokes cosmic fear • Coeval with religious feeling • Experiencing the numinous in the form of horror

  7. What is Horror • Knowledge as a theme _______________________________________ • Concerned with knowledge as theme - rendering the unknown known • Violation of schemes of cultural categorization (category mistakes are impure, dangerous, abominable) • Cognitive threat as a major factor in the generation of art-horror: how can you resolve contradictions (rationality) • Non-rational element as object of religious experience (“numen”) • Numinous experience (“mysterium tremendum fascinans et augustum”) at the core of being human

  8. What is Horror • Monsters _______________________________________ • Monsters - extraordinary characters in an ordinary world • Incomplete representatives of their class - abominations • Monsters’ categorical incompleteness: disintegrating things, formless, rotting • Interstitial, indescribable, inconceivable, “It,” “Them” • Revulsion and disgust • In violation of schemes of cultural categorization • Category mistakes are impure • What are monsters made of? • Fission (spatial or temporal) - incompleteness • Fusion - categories fused • Monstrosities often take mass form

  9. What is Horror • Horror as Carnival _______________________________________ • Popular culture phenomenon • Rituals of inversion for mass society (resolves contradictions) • Normal - abnormal - normal as allegory of reinstatement • BUT, is abnormal always expelled? And, what does that mean when reinstatement does not work? • Art-horror is ideological • Xenophobic, progressive, misogynist, politically repressive? • Or, just pointing to the existing contradictions in the world. • Does horror present a cynical disposition at its core? • Is horror radical?

  10. Genre characteristics and appeal • What readers like _______________________________________ • Interest in physical and emotional violence • The thrill and visceral experience caused by fear • Emotion of feeling art-horror • Gratification of being in an emotional state • Suspense integral to narrative structures in horror • Programmed blanks propel narrative • Relative probabilities and dual function narratives create • Use of weak models, keeping the evidence indecisive

  11. Genre characteristics and appeal - the formula • Plot structure _______________________________________ • Complex discovery plot • onset discovery confirmation confrontation • Discovery plot • onset discovery confirmation • Over-reacher plot (forbidden knowledge) • preparation experiment boomerang confrontation

  12. Genre characteristics and appeal • The Formula • _______________________________________ • 14 possible horror plot formulas (Carroll, p. 116) • Modification of the order of exposition:flashbacks, flashforwards, iteratives, nestings • Suspense - relative probabilities at the heart of horror appeal • Fantastic hesitation • Fantastic uncanny versus fantastic marvelous • Creating fantastic: use of weak models, keeping evidence as indecisive as possible

  13. Historical development and types _______________________________________ • Precursors and foundational works • English gothic novel, Schauer-Roman, roman noir • Horace Walpole, The Castle of Otranto (1764) • Popularity of gothic: 1820-1870 • Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818) • John Polidori’s The Vampyre (1819) • Charles Robert Maturin’s Melmoth the Wanderer (1820) • Edgar Allan Poe’s macabre • Modern horror • Robert Louis Stevenson, Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1886) • Oscar Wilde, Picture of Dorian Gray (1890) • Bram Stoker, Dracula (1897) • H.P. Lovecroft, Cthulhu Mythos series (1920s) • 20th century transmedia phenomenon, current concerns • Current trends • 1980s: Splatterpunk • Stephen King type fiction • 1990s: “horror goes underground” • Revitalized as literary fiction in many types of horror

  14. Types of Horror • _______________________________________ • Formal typology (Carroll, p. 4) • Historical gothic - imagined past without supernatural events • Natural or explained gothic - introduces supernatural and explains it away: Radcliffe’s Mysteries of Udolpho (1794) • Supernatural gothic - supernatural events • Equivocal gothic - supernatural origin of events in the text rendered ambiguous by means of disturbed characters • Subgenres • Ghost literature, alien invasion, tales of vampires, werewolves, zombies, demonic possession, etc. (more in Genreflecting guides)

  15. Types of Horror • _______________________________________ • Thematic categorization approach • Apocalypse • Cosmic horror • Dark fantasy • Demonic possession-invasion • Ghost stories • Haunted houses • Monsters • Psychological horror - serial killer • Splatterpunk • Vampires • Witchcraft • Zombies • Current trends at HWA site: http://www.horror.org/newsreleases.htm

  16. Conclusion • _______________________________________ • Horror is about limits of knowing in a post Enlightenment world • Genre of speculative fiction shares interest in possibilities • Secular, materialistic and cynical at its core • Horror is transmedia phenomenon

More Related