Horror and Religion: New Literary Approaches to Theology, Race and Sexuality

Horror and Religion: New Literary Approaches to Theology, Race and Sexuality

Horror and Religion: New Literary Approaches to Theology, Race and Sexuality

Horror and Religion: New Literary Approaches to Theology, Race and Sexuality

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Overview

Horror and Religion is an edited collection of essays offering structured discussions of spiritual and theological conflicts in Horror fiction from the late-sixteenth to the twenty-first century. Contributors explore the various ways that horror and religion have interacted over themes of race and sexuality; the texts under discussion chart the way in which the religious imagination has been deployed over the course of Horror fiction’s development, from a Gothic mode based in theological polemics to a more distinct genre in the twenty-first century that explores the afterlife of religion. Horror and Religion focuses on the Horror genre and its characteristics of the body, sexuality, trauma and race, and the essays explore how Horror fiction has shifted emphasis from anti-Catholicism and anti-Semitism to incorporate less understood historical and theological issues, such as the ‘Death of God’ and the spiritual destabilisation of the secular. By confronting spiritual conflicts in Horror fiction, this volume offers new perspectives on what we traditionally perceive as horrifying.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781786834423
Publisher: University of Wales Press
Publication date: 07/15/2019
Series: University of Wales Press Horror Studies Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 480 KB

About the Author

Horror and Religion is aimed at university students and academics interested in the areas of Gothic, Horror, Religious Studies, Theology and Comparative Literature.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements Notes on Contributors Introduction 1. ‘Headlong into an Immense Abyss’: Horror and Calvinism in Scotland and the United States - Neil Syme 2. The Blood is the Life: An Exploration of the Vampire’s Jewish Shadow - Mary Going 3. Decadent Horror Fiction and Fin-de-Siècle Neo-Thomism - Zoë Lehmann Imfeld 4. ‘Let the Queer One in’: The Performance of the Holy, Innocent and Monstrous Body in Vampire Fiction - Rachel Mann 5. More or Less Human, or Less is More Humane?: Monsters, Cyborgs and Technological (Ex)tensions of Edenic Bodies - Scott Midson 6. Horror and the Death of God - Simon Marsden 7. Aboriginal Ghosts, Sacred Cannibals and the Pagan Christ: Consuming the Past as Salvation in Wilson Harris’s Jonestown - Eleanor Beal 8. Reconfiguring Gothic Anti-Catholicism: Faith and Folk-Horror in the Work of Andrew Michael Hurley - Jonathan Greenaway 9. ‘Deliver Us from Evil’: David Mitchell, Repetition and Redemption - Andrew Tate Bibliography Index
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