Fr. 236.00

Critical Approaches to Horror Comic Books - Red Ink in the Gutter

English · Hardback

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Description

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This volume explores how horror comic books have negotiated with the social and cultural anxieties framing a specific era and geographical space.

Paying attention to academic gaps in comics' scholarship, these chapters engage with the study of comics from varying interdisciplinary perspectives, such as Marxism; posthumanism; and theories of adaptation, sociology, existentialism, and psychology. Without neglecting the classical era, the book presents case studies ranging from the mainstream comics to the independents, simultaneously offering new critical insights on zones of vacancy within the study of horror comic books while examining a global selection of horror comics from countries such as India (City of Sorrows), France (Zombillénium), Spain (Creepy), Italy (Dylan Dog), and Japan (Tanabe Gou's Manga Adaptations of H.P. Lovecraft), as well as the United States.

One of the first books centered exclusively on close readings of an under-studied field, this collection will have an appeal to scholars and students of horror comics studies, visual rhetoric, philosophy, sociology, media studies, pop culture, and film studies. It will also appeal to anyone interested in comic books in general and to those interested in investigating intricacies of the horror genre.

List of contents

1. Introduction, Part I: Horror Comic Books in a Socio-Historical Context, 2. From Caligari to Wertham: When EC’s Horror Comics Feared for Their Own Survival, 3. “Men have Sentenced This Fen to Death”: Marvel’s Man-Thing and the Liberation Politics of the 1970s, 4. The Horrors Haunting the City of Joy: Analyzing the Traumas of the Counterinsurgency in City of Sorrows, 5. Spanish Creepy: Historical Amnesia in “Las mil caras de Jack el destripador", Part II: Race and Gender in Horror Comic Books, 6. “A Sight to Dream of, Not to Tell!”: Orality and Power in Marguerite Bennett and Ariela Kristantina’s InSEXts, 7. Gendered Violence and the Abject Body in Junji Itō’s Tomie, 8. Lily Renée’s The Werewolf Hunter and the Secret Origin of Horror Comics, 9. The Wolf Only Needs to Find You Once: Food, Feeding, and Fear in the Dark Fairy Tales of Emily Carroll, 10. Borderland Werewolves: The Horrific Representation of the U.S.–Mexico Border in Feeding Ground, Part III: Adaptation in Horror Comic Books, 11. Flesh and Blood: Zombies, Vampires, and George A. Romero’s Transmedia Expansion of the Dead, 12. An Alien World: A Comic Book Adaptation of The Willows by Algernon Blackwood, 13. Horror Transformed: Tanabe Gou’s Manga Adaptations of H.P. Lovecraft, 14. Mutant Gothic: Marvel’s Mainstreaming of Horror in Uncanny X-Men, 15. Franken-Castle: Monster Hunters, Monstrous Masculinities, and the Punisher, Part IV: Horror Comic Books and Philosophy, 16. Dylan Dog’s Nightmares: The Unheimlich Experience of the Doppelgänger in Dylan Dog’s World, 17. Messages of Death: Haunted Media in “Kaine: Endorphins – Between Life and Death”, 18. Heterotopia and Horror at Show’s End, 19. The Hell Economics of Zombillénium, Index

About the author

John Darowski is a PhD candidate in Comparative Humanities at the University of Louisville, USA. He has edited an essay collection on Superman adaptations (2021) and has published several essays on the history of superheroes.
Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni Berns (PhD) works at the Universidad de Buenos Aires (UBA), Argentina. He teaches courses on international horror films and has authored a book about Spanish horror TV series Historias para no Dormir (2019) and has edited a book on James Wan's films.

Summary

This volume explores how horror comic books have negotiated with the social and cultural anxieties framing a specific era and geographical space.

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