Dreading the White Picket Fences: Domesticity and the Suburban Horror Film (CROSBI ID 216121)
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Lukić, Marko ; Pandžić, Maja
engleski
Dreading the White Picket Fences: Domesticity and the Suburban Horror Film
This article proposes the reading and tracing of a particular type of space – the American suburb – and its role in and contribution to the articulation of social anxieties through the horror slasher subgenre. The analysis will delineate the required historical and theoretical context preceding the birth of the suburban space as depicted in horror films such as A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984) and John Carpenter’s Halloween (1978). Elements including the idealized space of the home, the post-WWII inherited position of women within domestic spaces, the questions of repressed sexuality leading to the creation of the suburban monstrous, together with the final act of violent (feminine and nonfeminine) rebellion will be addressed in the attempt to form a connecting theoretical arc between spatial issues and a specific segment of horror genre production.
America; suburbia; film; horror; A Nightmare on Elm Street; Halloween
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