Monster culture in the 21st century : a reader
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Monster culture in the 21st century : a reader
Bloomsbury, 2013
- : PB
- : HB
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In the past decade, our rapidly changing world faced terrorism, global epidemics, economic and social strife, new communication technologies, immigration, and climate change to name a few. These fears and tensions reflect an evermore-interconnected global environment where increased mobility of people, technologies, and disease have produced great social, political, and economical uncertainty.
The essays in this collection examine how monstrosity has been used to manage these rising fears and tensions. Analyzing popular films and televisions shows, such as True Blood, Twilight, Paranormal Activity, District 9, Battlestar Galactica, and Avatar, it argues that monstrous narratives of the past decade have become omnipresent specifically because they represent collective social anxieties over resisting and embracing change in the 21st century.
The first comprehensive text that uses monstrosity not just as a metaphor for change, but rather a necessary condition through which change is lived and experienced in the 21st century, this approach introduces a different perspective toward the study of monstrosity in culture.
Table of Contents
Introduction: Toward a Comprehensive Monster Theory in the 21st Century by Marina Levina and Diem My Bui
1. Ontology and Monstrosity by Amit S. Rai
Part I: Monstrous Identities
2. Heading Towards the Past: The Twilight Vampire Figure as Surveillance Metaphor by Florian Grandena
3. Playing Alien in Post-Racial Times by Susana Loza
4. Battling Monsters and Becoming Monstrous: Human Devolution in The Walking Dead by Kyle W. Bishop
5. The Monster in the Mirror: Reflecting and Deflecting the Mobility of Gendered Violence Onscreen by Megan Foley
6. Intersectionality Bites: Metaphors of Race and Sexuality in HBO's True Blood by Peter Campbell
7. Gendering the Monster Within: Biological Essentialism, Sexual Difference, and Changing Symbolic Functions of the Monster in Popular Werewolf Texts by Rosalind Sibielski
Part II: Monstrous Technologies
8. Abject Posthumanism: Neoliberalism, Biopolitics and Zombies by Sherryl Vint
9. Monstrous Technologies and the Telepathology of Everyday Life by Jeremy Biles
10. Monstrous Citizenships: Coercion, Submission, and the Possibilities of Resistance in Never Let Me Go and Cloud Atlas by Roy Osamu Kamada
11. On the Frontlines of the Zombie War in the Congo: Digital Technology, the Trade in Conflict Minerals, and Zombification by Jeffrey W. Mantz
12. Monsters by the Numbers: Controlling Monstrosity in Video Games by Jaroslav Svelch
13. Killing Whiteness:The Critical Positioning of Zombie Walk Brides in Internet Settings by Michele White
Part III: Monstrous Territories
14. Zombinations: Reading the undead as debt and guilt in the national imaginary by Michael S. Drake
15. The Monster Within: Post-9/11 Narratives of Threat and the U.S. Shifting Terrain of Terror by Mary K. Bloodsworth-Lugo and Carmen R. Lugo-Lugo
16. The Heartland Under Siege: Undead in the West by Cynthia J. Miller and A. Bowdoin Van Riper
17. When Matter Becomes an Active Agent: The Incorporeal Monstrosity of Threat in Lost by Enrica Picarelli
18. Monstrous Capital: Frankenstein Derivatives, Financial Wizards, and the Spectral Economy by Ryan Gillespie
19. Domesticating the Monstrous in the Globalizing World by Carolyn Harford
About the Contributors
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