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This volume introduces a fresh exploration of Classical literature, examining its engagement with personal or collective tragedy, horrific events, and fear-inflicting episodes. It explores the different ways fear, terror, and horror have been manifested in Graeco-Roman culture and their reception.
While previous studies often examine physiological and psychological reactions to horror, fear and dread in classical literature and its reception (in fiction and the performing arts) separately, this volume connects these concepts into a broader, unified framework, exploring their presence in both classical antiquity and modern fiction. The individual chapters introduce a new theoretical and conceptual framework for the growing field of Horror Studies as applied to the classical world, and cover its application in a broad range of ancient interpretations and modern media, from Greek tragedy, Roman drama and poetry, myth and Etrurian daemons, to modern Spanish theatrical receptions, animation, Lovecraft and
The Haunting of Bly Manor. It examines themes such as body horror, haunted spaces, and suspense in the Graeco-Roman tradition and its modern reinterpretation, expanding the scope of traditional scholarship and providing fresh insight into the genre in classical literature and culture.
The book serves as a valuable resource for students and scholars interested in the emotions and Horror Studies in classical antiquity, and in classical reception. It will also be of interest to those working in the fields of Literary Criticism, Comparative Literature, Cultural Studies, and Classical Archaeology, who will encounter a novel exploration of classical themes and their reconceptualization in pop culture as well as in the visual and performing arts.
List of contents
Introduction: Unleashing Classical Dread
Part 1: Violence and the Appeal of Horror 1. Horrific Facts over Horrific Fictions: Ancient Interventions into Horror's Appeal 2. A Morbid Taste for the Suffering Girl: Cultural Roots of Gore Scenes in Ancient Greek Novel 3. Violence and Forgetting: Traces of Greek Mythology in Flanagan's Manor
Part 2: Daemons, Monsters, and other Fantastic Creatures 4. From Terrifying to Comforting: A Brief Study of Underworld Daemons in Etruria 5. Laughing and/or Fearing the Witch: Exploring Horace's Canidia & The Monstrous-Feminine 6. "That limitless Mind": Yog-Sothoth and the reception of Hermetic ¿¿¿¿¿¿ in H.P. Lovecraft's fiction
Part 3: Altering Human Condition: Death and Necromancy 7. The Basel Dancers (BS 415): A Tragic Chorus Pleading with the Ghost of Patroclus? 8. Dead Men Do Tell Tales: Lucan's Necromancy Recentered 9. Reworking the Horror of War and Death in Contemporary Spanish Theatre: The "Impossible Heroism" of Numantia and Saguntum
Part 4: Body Horror and Spectatorship 10. Cannibals, Amazons, and the Male Gaze: Horror and Horror Cinematography in Imperial Greek Epic 11.
Horresco intuens: Body Horror, Embodied Spectatorship, and the Extispicium of Seneca's
Oedipus 12. "Convert of Die": The Horror of Cannibalism in
Blood of Zeus and Graeco-Roman Mythology
Part 5: Fear and Suspense 13. "Don't Go in There!" Forms of Fear and Suspense in Aeschylus 14. Knives and Masks: Agency as a Suspense Device from Greek Tragedy to Slasher 15. Lucian's Lies and Trimalchio's Truths: Memorates and Credibility in
The Lover of Lies and the
Satyricon
About the author
Isidro Molina Zorrilla is Assistant Professor of Greek Philology at the University of Málaga (Spain). His research focus on Greek Tragedy and its reception in cinema and popular culture. He has published "The Tragedy of Eddard Stark: Greek Tragedy in
A Song of Ice and Fire" in
Games of Thrones - A View from the Humanities Vol. 2 (2023).
Nuno Simões Rodrigues is Associate Professor at the University of Lisbon (Portugal). His research has focused on themes in the Cultural History of Ancient Greece, the Social and Political History of Ancient Rome, and Reception Studies. He is author of Portuguese translations of Euripides, Plutarch, and the Historia Augusta.
Vasileios Balaskas is Assistant Professor of Modern Greek Studies at the University of Málaga (Spain). His research centres on how modern cultural and sociopolitical expressions appropriated Graeco-Roman antiquity. He has published
Revivals of Classical Drama in Greece and Spain (1860s-1970s): Theatre in the Realm of Ideology (2025).