Fear and Nature : : Ecohorror Studies in the Anthropocene.

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:AnthropoScene Series
:
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:University Park, PA : : Pennsylvania State University Press,, 2023.
Ã2021.
Year of Publication:2023
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Series:AnthropoScene Series
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (331 pages)
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Table of Contents:
  • Intro
  • Half Title Page
  • Title Page
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction: Ecohorror in the Anthropocene
  • Part 1: Expanding Ecohorror
  • 1. Tentacular Ecohorror and the Agency of Trees in Algernon Blackwood's "The Man Whom the Trees Loved" and Lorcan Finnegan's Without Name
  • 2. Spiraling Inward and Outward: Junji Ito's Uzumaki and the Scope of Ecohorror
  • 3. "The Hand of Deadly Decay": The Rotting Corpse, America's Religious Tradition, and the Ethics of Green Burial in Poe's "The Colloquy of Monos and Una"
  • Part 2: Haunted and Unhaunted Landscapes
  • 4. The Death of Birdsong, the Birdsong of Death: Algernon Charles Swinburne and the Horror of Erosion
  • 5. An Unhaunted Landscape: The Anti-Gothic Impulse in Ambrose Bierce's "A Tough Tussle"
  • 6. The Extinction-Haunted Salton Sea in The Monster That Challenged the World
  • Part 3: The Ecohorror of Intimacy
  • 7. From the Bedroom to the Bathroom: Stephen King's Scatology and the Emergence of an Urban Environmental Gothic
  • 8. "This Bird Made an Art of Being Vile": Ontological Difference and Uncomfortable Intimacies in Stephen Gregory's The Cormorant
  • 9. The Shape of Water and Post-pastoral Ecohorror
  • Part 4: Being Prey, Being Food
  • 10. Superpig Blues: Agribusiness Ecohorror in Bong Joon-ho's Okja
  • 11. Zoo: Television Ecohorror On and Off the Screen
  • 12. Naturalizing White Supremacy in The Shallows
  • Contributors
  • Index.