Horror

Horror Highlights: THAT VERY WITCH, HORROR IN HADDONFIELD, SURVIVING LA LLORONA


Horror Highlights: THAT VERY WITCH, HORROR IN HADDONFIELD, SURVIVING LA LLORONA

That Very Witch: Fear, Feminism, and the American Witch Movie: “Researched over the course of seven years, That Very Witch: Fear, Feminism, and the American Witch Movie explores the cyclical rise and fall of the cinematic witch in American culture and her relationship to feminist movements over time.

Through historical analysis and dozens of case studies, Payton McCarty-Simas analyzes how the witch came to be understood as the ultimate cultural bogeywoman on the one hand and a classic feminist symbol of empowerment on the other.

It traces the representation of “demonic women” in the past decade back to older horror cycles and through the “New Age” section of your local bookstore, investigating the (counter)cultural shifts along the way.

The book is a deep dive that demonstrates how changes in cinematic portrayals of the witch over time reflect major shifts in how feminism is perceived politically and interpreted culturally in America. From the birth of the Second Wave to the Moral Majority, from the Satanic Panic to “post-feminism”, from #MeToo to the 2024 election, the witch can be found at the heart of the zeitgeist. What can we learn from her presence?”

Read an excerpt below and to pre-order now, visit: https://www.lunapresspublishing.com/product-page/that-very-witch-that-very-witch-fear-feminism-and-the-american-witch-movie

To say that witches are a feminist symbol may not come as a surprise at this point in history. As horror scholar Barbara Creed points out in her 1993 book The Monstrous-Feminine, witches are the only predominantly female classic horror monster, and unlike vampires or werewolves, this particular monster is burned into our cultural psyche by very real ghost stories and tales of femicide that have marred our history since before our nationʼs founding. Witches have always been deeply political symbols of womenʼs oppression, as well as womenʼs power to resist it. But since the mid-2010s, witches have been in vogue, alongside other feminist antiheroes, “feral” women, and “unlikable female characters” in our pop culture. Over the past decade, this icon of dark femininity has become omnipresent: you might have noticed a New Age section at the local Barnes and Nobles stocked with the Modern Witch Tarot Deck and explicitly feminist Wicca-for-beginners guides with titles like Witch Please. This mainstream wave of witchery and New Age belief— from your friendʼs dedication to the Co-Star astrology app to the remake of Wicked (2024) with Ariana Grande—is part of a longer history of this much loved (and deeply feared) archetype of the monstrous feminine. All of which led me to wonder: how did we get here? Why are we seeing this now? What about the witch has become so appealing to the feminists of the past decade, as opposed to, say, the feminists of the 2000s? Or the 1980s? What can we learn from the pop cultural feminist (or the merely feminist-coded) witch? Are these witches feminist? 

The chapters that follow take on these questions, spanning seven decades, thirteen presidential administrations, and hundreds of films. Most of this book was written while staring down the barrel of the 2024 presidential election, in a moment when conservative judges already felt empowered to suggest that women incur the wrath of God when they seek reproductive healthcare, when the rise of AI has blended real life and our media simulacra of it goes far beyond what even Jean Baudrillard or Marshall McLuhan would have believed possible. I view this project in part as a look at how we got here as a nation. What kinds of stories we tell to give each other the creeps provide a window into what—and whom—we fear. Following those scary stories through history, finding them over and over again across time and genre, seeing them told everywhere—from the grindhouse and the arthouse to the multiplex and the video store, and eventually on streaming platforms—we can begin to learn why we fear what they represent. And what it means when those stories lose their power to scare and become something else.

Horror in Haddonfield: Halloween’s Untold Stories: “Happy Halloween, Michael. Horror in Haddonfield: Halloween’s Untold Stories, by Horror Obsessive founder and crackerjack fright geek Andrew Grevas, unmasks the secrets behind all thirteen of the films in horror’s oldest and longest running slasher franchise. Combining essays and interviews with the casts and creative teams, Grevas uncomplicates complicated timelines, dishes on the films that were planned but never made it to the screen, and reveals never-heard-before stories about the making of the movies. Evil never dies, and nor does horror fans’ fascination with Laurie Strode, Dr. Samuel Loomis, and of course legendary psychopath Michael Myers, whom Vox has dubbed “horror’s most implacable killer.” Includes interviews with actors Ellie Cornell, Danielle Harris, Scout Taylor-Compton, Stacey Nelkin, Dee Wallace, and Tom Atkins; writers Paul Brad Logan, Dan Farrands, Robert Zappia, Shem Bitterman; director Dwight Little; cinematographer Dean Cundey and many more.”