ABSTRACT

This book examines the recent trend in global cinema to feature infectious disease.

As the global crisis of the COVID-19 pandemic materialised the anxieties and discourses of world risk that had long been portrayed in popular media, the book provides a novel definition of the epidemic film genre and offers a systematic look into the narrative and stylistic conventions that characterise it. Epidemic Cinema traces the evolution of the genre from its early cinematic origins to establish the founding principles of a genre standing at the crossroads between science-fiction and horror. It draws on close textual analysis to show how the pandemic reified one of the central predicaments of epidemic narratives: the constant tension existing between free-floating phenomena and the impulse to control and resist such phenomena, ultimately epitomised by the trope of the border. Showing how infectious diseases offer a rich allegorical frame which cinema uses to articulate timely anxieties of growingly invisible and deterritorialised risks, the author presents the prevalence of contagion in popular culture as a symptom of this growingly viral and virus-ridden context, both in its most literal and metaphorical sense.

This insightful study will interest students and scholars of film studies, global cinema, science-fiction, horror, popular culture and genre theory.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|29 pages

Plague-Metaphors in the Age of the Virus

chapter 2|36 pages

The Origins of the Genre

chapter 3|37 pages

Defining the Epidemic Genre

chapter 4|29 pages

Connectivity

Contagion and Viral (Dis)Information

chapter 5|22 pages

Territorial Conversion

Children of Men and Viral Fear

chapter 6|26 pages

Bodily Conversion

Warm Bodies and Viral Love

chapter 7|27 pages

Containment

Blindness and Viral Media

chapter |3 pages

Conclusion