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Times of Horror, Magic, and the Reproductive Body in Popular Culture [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 228 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 2 Line drawings, black and white; 2 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Routledge Advances in Popular Culture Studies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 03-Jun-2026
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1041145640
  • ISBN-13: 9781041145646
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  • Hind: 212,25 €
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 228 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 2 Line drawings, black and white; 2 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Routledge Advances in Popular Culture Studies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 03-Jun-2026
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1041145640
  • ISBN-13: 9781041145646
This innovative collection explores the intersection of magic, reproduction, and horror in contemporary culture, examining how these elements reflect and critique societal anxieties during a time of unprecedented challenges to reproductive rights, scientific advances in reproduction, and rising magical thinking in our post-pandemic world.

Addressing horror in popular culture, this volume investigates how the female body becomes a site of cultural contradiction, where ancient myths meet modern technologies, and where social power structures manifest through narratives of purity, contamination, and transformation. This book brings together diverse perspectives from biology, film studies, literary history, ethnology, and queer studies. Key features include analysis of horror across global cultures, from Anglo-American film to Indian cinema and East Asian popular culture; exploration of reproductive themes in young adult literature and superhero narratives; and examination of how magical thinking intersects with modern reproductive technologies. This volume's creative structure, organised around temporal categories, allows readers to trace the importance of these themes from ancient stories through contemporary issues to future speculations, while highlighting the persistent role of magic in shaping cultural narratives about reproduction.

This collection will appeal to scholars and graduate students in gender studies, film studies, cultural studies, and reproductive rights, as well as researchers interested in the intersection of horror and society. It offers valuable insights for academics studying contemporary media, feminist theory, and the sociology of reproduction, while remaining accessible to informed readers interested in understanding how horror reflects and shapes cultural attitudes toward reproduction and female bodies. The interdisciplinary approach makes it particularly valuable for those seeking to understand the complex relationships between magical thinking, reproductive rights, and popular culture in our rapidly changing world.
Beginnings Foreword. Introduction: Intersections of Reproduction and
Magic in Horror: A Matter of Time Imagined Futures
1. The Horror of Time:
Reproductive Anxiety and Transgenerational Haunting in Clock (2023)
2. Body
Politic Horror and the Death Drive in Kamen Rider Black Sun
3. Rebirthing the
(Anglo-American) World: Reproductive Fantasies in Post-Pandemic Dystopian
Cinema
4. My Blood is Magic: The Birth of the Posthuman Imagined Pasts
5.
Transpositional Subjects and Postapocalyptic Monstrosities in Mary Shelleys
Frankenstein and Last Man
6. Wrath of Kl: The Terrible Mother and the
Apocalyptic Beat Offsprings
7. Not Just the Pontianak: Maternal Death and
Agency in the Malaysian Folk Horror Narrative
8. Changelings, Crones,
Witches, and Werewolves: Reproductive Horror in Mike Mignolas Early Hellboy
Stories The Present: Critical Visions
9. Creation as an Act of Rebellion:
Magic, Biopower, and Reclamation in Spare and Found Parts by Sarah Maria
Griffin
10. Motherhood, Magic and Horror in Delicate Condition and The
Upstairs House
11. Ghostly Mothers and Unborn Babies: Reading Maternal Bodies
as Contested Sites of Domination and Transgression in Contemporary Bollywood
Horror Cinema
12. Monstrous Ambivalence and Sociospatial Subversion in Good
Manners
13. Immortality and mass production in Chucky
14. Queer Pregnancies
in Kirsty Logans Fiction
Ruth Barratt-Peacock has published broadly in literature, metal music studies, childhood studies, and Gothic studies. She studied English Literature and Musicology at the University of Tasmania before pursuing a Masters of Literature, Culture, and Art at the Friedrich-Schiller University Jena and the renowned University of Music Franz Liszt Weimar. She wrote her PhD on contemporary Australian poetry and Romantic epistemological philosophy at the interdisciplinary research group Modell Romantik: Variation, Reichweite, Aktualität (Romanticism as a model) funded by the German Research Council at FSU Jena. She is currently a Walter Benjamin fellow with the University of Huddersfield. Her most recent papers appear in Popular Television, English: Journal of the English Society Oxford, Intermédialités Histoire et théorie des arts, des lettres et des technique, The East Asian Journal of Popular Culture, The Australasian Journal of Popular Culture, Aeternum : The Journal of Contemporary Gothic Studies, and Metal Music Studies. Previous book-length publications include the edited collection Medievalism in Metal Music: Throwing Down the Gauntlet (with Ross Hagen, Emerald Press) and Concrete Horizons: Romantic Irony in the Poetry of David Malouf and Samual Wagan Watson (Peter Lang).