
Folk Horror on Film: Return of the British Repressed - Paperback
Folk Horror on Film: Return of the British Repressed - Paperback
$49.66
/

products.product.pickup_availability.unavailable
Your payment information is processed securely. We do not store credit card details nor have access to your credit card information.
by Kevin J. Donnelly (Editor), Louis Bayman (Editor)
This is the first scholarly collection to focus on the special importance of British cinema to folk horror. The chapters consider the artistic styles, historical contexts, cultural tensions and cinematic fears that distinguish folk horror from other forms of horror and from traditional ways of viewing the folk.
Back Jacket
Folk horror has become a true contemporary cultural phenomenon. But what is this peculiar genre, and what makes it so horrific?
This collection considers the special importance that British cinema has to folk horror, and vice versa. It explores such staples of the genre as Witchfinder General (1968), Blood on Satan's Claw (1971) and The Wicker Man (1973), but also looks beyond them, presenting studies of the sci-fi horror Doomwatch (1972), the documentary Requiem for a Village (1975) and the works of Ken Russell and Ben Wheatley, alongside many other folk horror films. The collection provides new ways of understanding the uncanny settings and recurring themes that make folk horror so scary and so culturally resonant. Across various chapters on different topics, folk horror appears as a cinematic vision of the remnants of history, unearthed amid the destabilising uncertainties of a de-industrialising, post-imperial Britain. Folk horror on film: Return of the British repressed provides a compelling account of the genre and a provocative perspective on what makes folk horror unique: its monsters are neither the ghouls of folklore nor the psycho-killers of the slasher; they are the British themselves and their own national past.Author Biography
Louis Bayman is Associate Professor of Film Studies at the University of Southampton
K. J. Donnelly is Professor of Film and Film Music at the University of Southampton



















