Fr. 27.90

Reading American Horror Story - Essays on the Television Franchise

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Looming onto the television landscape in 2011, American Horror Story gave viewers a weekly dose of psychological unease and gruesome violence. Embracing the familiar horror conventions of spooky settings, unnerving manifestations and terrifying monsters, series co-creators Ryan Murphy and Brad Falchuk combine shocking visual effects with an engaging anthology format to provide a modern take on the horror genre.
This collection of new essays examines the series' contribution to television horror, focusing on how the show speaks to social concerns, its use of classic horror tropes and its reinvention of the tale of terror for the 21st century.

List of contents










Table of Contents


Acknowledgments

Introduction

Part One: Industry and Culture

American Horror Stories, Repertory Horror and Intertextuality of Casting (Lorna Jowett)

Haunted History: American Horror Story as Gothic Tourism (Stacey Abbott)

Seasons, Family and Nation in American Horror Story (Derek Johnston)

Part Two: Issues of Representation

Static Femininity: Gender and Familial Representation

deleteMurder House (Nikki Cox)

The Minotaur, the Shears and the Melon Baller: Queerness and ­Self-Mortification in Coven (Kyle Ethridge)

"Wir sind alle freaks": Elevating White Gay Male Oppression Through Representations of Disability (Carl Schottmiller)

Part Three: Genre Tropes and the Horror of History

"There's a power in it. A power we can use": Perpetuating the Past in Murder House (Rebecca Janicker)

"They were monsters": The Alien Abduction Plotline and Race, Sexuality and Social Unrest in Asylum (Philip L. Simpson)

Piecing It Together: Genre Frameworks in American Horror

deleteStory (Emma Austin)

Nightmares Made in America: Coven and the Real American Horror Story (Conny Lippert)

Epilogue: Past Nightmares and Anticipated Horrors (Rebecca Janicker)

Glossary

About the Contributors

Index


About the author

Rebecca Janicker is a senior lecturer in film and media studies at the University of Portsmouth in the United Kingdom.

Summary

Looming onto the television horror landscape in October 2011, a new drama known simply as American Horror Story gave its eager viewers a lurid and graphic weekly dose of psychological unease and gruesome violence. As the first book-length study of American Horror Story, this collection examines the contribution that this franchise has made to small screen horror.

Product details

Assisted by Rebecca Janicker (Editor)
Publisher Ingram Publishers Services
 
Languages English
Age Recommendation from age 18
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 30.06.2017
 
EAN 9781476663524
ISBN 978-1-4766-6352-4
No. of pages 228
Dimensions 152 mm x 229 mm x 12 mm
Weight 313 g
Illustrations Raster,schwarz-weiss
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Art > Photography, film, video, TV

Television, LITERARY CRITICISM / Horror & Supernatural, Horror and supernatural fiction, Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers, Television: styles and genres, horror tv

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