Final Girls, Feminism and Popular Culture
This volume examines contemporary reformulations of the ‘Final Girl’ in film, TV, literature and comic, expanding the discussion of the trope beyond the slasher subgenre. Focusing specifically on popular texts that emerged in the 21st century, the volume asks: What is the sociocultural context that facilitated the remarkable proliferation of the Final Girls? What kinds of stories are told in these narratives and can they help us make sense of feminism? What are the roles of literature and media in the reconsiderations of Carol J. Clover’s term of thirty years ago and how does this term continue to inform our understanding of popular culture? The contributors to this collection take up these concerns from diverse perspectives and with different answers, notably spanning theories of genre, posthumanism, gender, sexuality and race, as well as audience reception and spectatorship.

"1133044359"
Final Girls, Feminism and Popular Culture
This volume examines contemporary reformulations of the ‘Final Girl’ in film, TV, literature and comic, expanding the discussion of the trope beyond the slasher subgenre. Focusing specifically on popular texts that emerged in the 21st century, the volume asks: What is the sociocultural context that facilitated the remarkable proliferation of the Final Girls? What kinds of stories are told in these narratives and can they help us make sense of feminism? What are the roles of literature and media in the reconsiderations of Carol J. Clover’s term of thirty years ago and how does this term continue to inform our understanding of popular culture? The contributors to this collection take up these concerns from diverse perspectives and with different answers, notably spanning theories of genre, posthumanism, gender, sexuality and race, as well as audience reception and spectatorship.

139.99 In Stock
Final Girls, Feminism and Popular Culture

Final Girls, Feminism and Popular Culture

Final Girls, Feminism and Popular Culture

Final Girls, Feminism and Popular Culture

Hardcover(1st ed. 2020)

$139.99 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

This volume examines contemporary reformulations of the ‘Final Girl’ in film, TV, literature and comic, expanding the discussion of the trope beyond the slasher subgenre. Focusing specifically on popular texts that emerged in the 21st century, the volume asks: What is the sociocultural context that facilitated the remarkable proliferation of the Final Girls? What kinds of stories are told in these narratives and can they help us make sense of feminism? What are the roles of literature and media in the reconsiderations of Carol J. Clover’s term of thirty years ago and how does this term continue to inform our understanding of popular culture? The contributors to this collection take up these concerns from diverse perspectives and with different answers, notably spanning theories of genre, posthumanism, gender, sexuality and race, as well as audience reception and spectatorship.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783030315221
Publisher: Springer International Publishing
Publication date: 05/06/2020
Edition description: 1st ed. 2020
Pages: 281
Product dimensions: 5.83(w) x 8.27(h) x 0.00(d)

About the Author

Katarzyna Paszkiewicz is Lecturer in English Studies at the University of the Balearic Islands, Spain, and member of ADHUC–Research Center for Theory, Gender and Sexuality (University of Barcelona). She has co-edited, with Mary Harrod, Women Do Genre in Film and Television (2017, Winner of first Prize in the BAFTSS Best Edited Collection competition) and published her monograph Genre, Authorship and Contemporary Women Filmmakers (2018).

Stacy Rusnak is Associate Professor of Film at Georgia Gwinnett College, Georgia. Her publications include chapters on MTV and the 1980s satanic panic, cannibalism and consumption in Jorge Michel Grau’s Somos lo que hay and third wave feminism in Twin Peaks. She has also served as guest judge for Atlanta’s Buried Alive Film Festival.

Table of Contents

1 Introduction: Reimagining the Final Girl in the 21st Century.- Katarzyna Paszkiewicz and Stacy Rusnak.- SECTION 1.- From Slasher Films to Slasher TV Series.- 2 ‘People Call Me a Final Girl, But We’re All Final Girls in Lakewood’: Female Survivor(s) in Scream: The TV Series.- Isabel Clúa.- 3 The Final Girl(s): Queerness, Normativity and Survival in Scream Queens.- Peter Marra.- SECTION 2.- The Final Girl(s) in Horror Film.- 4 Who Are We? Queering the Final Girl in Alexandre Aja’s High Tension (2003).- Rebecca Willoughby.- 5 Get Out: Moral Monsters at the Intersection of Racism and the Horror Film.- Isabel Pinedo.- 6 The Slasher Film and the Final Girl Get Makeovers: It Follows and the Politics of Fourth Wave Feminism.- Stacy Rusnak.- 7 ‘Wouldst Thou Like to Live Deliciously?’: Gothic Feminism and the Final Girl in Robert Eggers’ The Witch(2015).- Vicki Madden.- SECTION 3.- The Final Girl(s) Beyond the Horror Genre.- 8 Sinister Power Play and the Final Girl: Katniss Everdeen in Suzanne Collin’s The Hunger Games Trilogy.- Sara Martín.- 9 Monstrous Final Girls: The Posthuman Body in Paolo Bacigalupi’s The Windup Girl and M.R. Carey’s The Girl with All the Gifts.- Isabel Santaulària.- 10 Other Girl Powers: Final Girls, Super Girls and Kamala Khan’s Ms. Marvel.- Andrea Ruthven.- SECTION 4.- Ways of Seeing: The Final Girl(s) and Spectatorship.- 11 The Final Girl in the Red Dress: Ways of Moving in the Resident Evil Films.- Steven Rybin.- 12 ‘What Were We – Idiots?’: Re-evaluating Female Spectatorship and the New Horror Heroine with Catherine Hardwicke’s Twilight (2008).- Angie Fazekas and Dan Vena.- 13 ‘Just Keep Looking Forward or We’ll Be Stuck Here Forever’: The Final Girls (2015), Spectatorial Address and Transformations of the Slasher Form.- Katarzyna Paszkiewicz.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“A fascinating exploration of the Final Girl and her place in feminist scholarship! Final Girls, Feminism and Popular Culture takes a wide-ranging look at the presence of this evocative trope in 21st century film and television as well as popular fiction and comics. Carol Clover first identified the Final Girl in her influential 1990s work on the horror/slasher film, and the editors begin this volume with a richly researched introduction that traces the use of that scholarship to support shifting and, at times, competing feminist perspectives on popular culture. The essays that follow continue what becomes a sustained and substantial conversation with Clover. Ambitiously conceived, lucidly written and transnational in its reach, Final Girls is packed with subtle readings of texts both popular and less widely known. It is essential reading for anyone interested in the ways contemporary popular culture has imagined female heroism and resistance to suffering and violence.” (Kathleen Rowe Karlyn, Professor Emerita, University of Oregon)

“We all think we know what the Final Girl is. Carol Clover. Men, Women and Chain Saws. The last woman standing at the end of the slasher film, bloodied but ultimately unbowed, having overcome the (male) killer. Final Girls, Feminism and Popular Culture questions this formulation and considers the implications of this gendered trope for 21st century feminism: what do we mean by the Final Girl in a nonbinary, intersectional, multimodal world? Smart, rigorous and always entertaining, this outstanding book is essential reading for scholars, fans and filmmakers alike.” (Alison Peirse, Associate Professor in Film and Media, University of Leeds)

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews