ABSTRACT

From Frankenstein and Dracula to Psycho and The Chainsaw Massacre, horror fiction has provided our culture with some of its most enduring themes and narratives. Considering horror fiction both as a genre and as a social phenomenon, Joseph Grixti provides a theoretical and historical framework for reconsidering horror and the cultural apparatus that surrounds it. First published in 1989, this book looks at shifts in the genre’s meaning – its fascination with excess, its commentaries on the categories and boundaries of culture – and at interpretations of horror from psychology, psychoanalysis, sociology, cultural and media studies.

Terrors of Uncertainty brings together a provocative range of perspectives from across the disciplines, which combine to raise important questions about the relationship between fiction and society, and the way in which we use fiction to resolve or evade our fears of uncertainty.

part I|74 pages

Horror and Helplessness in Contemporary Bestsellers

part II|101 pages

Academic Perspectives

chapter Chapter 4|31 pages

Catharsis and the Myth of the Beast

chapter Chapter 6|29 pages

Consciousness, Fiction, and the Terrors of Uncertainty