Call for submissions – Religion and Horror Comics

While many genres offer the potential for theological reflection and exploration of religious issues, the nature of horror provides unique ways to wrestle with these questions. Since the EC Comics of the 1950s, horror comics have performed theological work in ways that are sometimes obvious, sometimes subtle, but frequently surprising and provocative. This volume will bring together essays covering the history of horror comics, with a focus on their engagement with religious and theological issues.

Essays have been accepted on the topics of the morality of the EC Comics, the liminality of John Constantine, cosmic indifference in the work of Junji Ito, and the reincarnated demons of the web-comic “The Devil is a Handsome Man.” We are seeking essays on a wide range of other topics, possibly including but not necessarily limited to:

· Alan Moore’s Swamp Thing and Post-Humanist Theology

· Religious Pluralism and The Sandman

· Lucifer in the Sandman Universe

· The Theological Universe of Gideon’s Fall

· The Function of Islam in Infidels

· Folk Religious Practices and Harrow County

· The Human and the Divine in Chu

· Horror as a Theological Turn in Superhero Comics (particularly how Batman and Daredevil use horror)

· Cain and Abel in House of Secrets/House of Mystery

· The Joker’s Theology

· Seeking the Divine in Werewolf by Night

· The Unseen Realities of Outcast

· Concepts of Hell and damnation in Hellboy and Spawn

As there has already been a large amount of scholarship on The Walking Dead, we will not include any essays on it in this volume.

This volume is a part of the Religion and Comics series, published by Claremont Press. It will be co-edited by Brandon R. Grafius and John W. Morehead. Grafius is associate professor of biblical studies at Ecumenical Theological Seminary, whose recent books include Reading the Bible with Horror (Lexington Books/Fortress Academic) and a handbook on the film The Witch in the Devil’s Advocates Series (Auteur Publishing/Liverpool University Press). Morehead is the proprietor of TheoFantastique.com, and is a contributor, editor and co-editor to a number of books including The Undead and Theology, Joss Whedon and Religion, The Supernatural Cinema of Guillermo del Toro, and Fantastic Fan Cultures and the Sacred. Together, they have co-edited the volume Theology and Horror (Lexington Books, forthcoming), and the Oxford Handbook of Biblical Monsters (forthcoming, 2023). Abstracts of 300-500 words with CVs should be sent to johnwmorehead@msn.com and bgrafius@etseminary.edu by December 1, 2020. The submission deadline for drafts of manuscripts of 6,000-8,000 words is scheduled for June 1, 2021.

Joseph Laycock releases “The Penguin Book of Exorcisms”

I’m pleased to announce that a new book is available starting today, The Penguin Book of Exorcisms by Joseph Laycock. From the promotional material made available by the publisher:

While researching The Penguin Book of Exorcisms, Professor Laycock discovered sources and translations that haven’t been previously reported or published, including:

·         The most “unpublished” text is The Earling Possession Case which literally begins with the words “These are not to be published through the press or through the pulpit.”  This is a well-known case and there was a secret church account of what happened that contradicts that the story that was published (the exorcism was not, in fact, successful).

·         The diary of Joseph Pitkin has never been transcribed and reproduced in full before.

·         The hadith of Ahmad b. Hanbal is an original translation.

Plus, an interview with Laycock, also made available by the publisher:

Which of your resources and research discoveries are being revealed for the first time in THE PENGUIN BOOK OF EXORCISMS? Did anything you came across upend commonly held beliefs about demonic possession and exorcism?

I was granted permission to reproduce a letter from a Catholic priest to his bishop requesting to perform an exorcism.  That exorcism took place in Gary, Indiana, in 2012 and the case was subject of the 2018 documentary Demon House by ghost-hunter Zak Bagans.  I am interested in this letter as someone who studies church history.  Priests must receive permission from their bishop to perform an exorcism, but I am unaware of any other example of a letter like this that has been made available to the public.

The text I am most excited about is a secret account of an exorcism that occurred in Earling, Iowa, in 1928, written by a priest who was friends with the exorcist.  That exorcism is well known, but the “official” version of the story was that the exorcism was a success.  This text shows it wasn’t––the woman’s possession kept going.  Furthermore, she was delivering prophecies that world would end in 1955!

Another famous exorcism is that of a Zulu girl named Clara Germana Tele in South Africa in 1906.  I was able to find the original account of the exorcism written by the missionaries involved, which had been nearly lost.  I was also able to access a handwritten diary from 1740 by a merchant named Joseph Pitkin who encountered a possessed woman on a business trip to Boston.  Historians knew about this diary but to my knowledge this was the first attempt to type up the full account.  Pitkin’s handwriting is beautiful but hard to decipher in places! None of this would have been possible without the work of professional librarians who maintain archives and work with researchers.

How does your background make you uniquely qualified to write this book? Have you ever witnessed an exorcism?

I’m a professor of religious studies.  No academic field is well equipped to study the phenomenon of possession.  It would be unethical for scientists to do laboratory experiments on allegedly possessed people.  Historians struggle to interpret accounts of things like levitation that are normally understood to be impossible.  If a text reports a natural phenomenon like a flood or a disease, historians know what kind of evidence could corroborate or contradict that report.  But we’ve never seen someone levitate, so we have to either assume out of hand that the story is false or concede that we don’t know what kind of evidence to look for.  Religious studies isn’t much better at these problems, but we have at least acknowledged that it is important to be think critically about these sorts of accounts without being dismissive or smug.

I have spoken with people who have performed or assisted in exorcisms but I have never observed one firsthand.  To me, this would feel like spying on someone else’s therapy session.  Whatever is happening to people who undergo exorcism, I don’t believe it should be a spectator sport.  In early modern Europe, public exorcisms often preceded executions and political intrigue.

Why do you think we remain endlessly fascinated with demonic possession?

A foundational assumption of our society is that we are stable, autonomous individuals who go about making rational choices.  But I don’t believe we know our own minds as well as we think we do.  Nietzsche wrote, “A thought comes when ‘it’ wants, not when ‘I’ want it; so that it is a falsification of the facts to say: the subject ‘I’ is the condition of the predicate ‘think.’”  We can’t always explain how we suddenly get brilliant ideas, or why we do things that we know will have bad consequences in the future, or why we sometimes snap at our friends for no good reason.  Whether or not we attribute these experiences to the influence spirit entities, I think we see something of ourselves in possessed people: Sometimes we all act as if possessed.  Possession stories remind us that we are haunted by parts of ourselves we do not fully understand.

Carlo Maria Vigano, an Italian archbishop of the Catholic Church who once served as the Vatican’s diplomatic representative to the U.S., called on his fellow clergy to perform a “mass exorcism” on Holy Saturday, the day before Easter Sunday 2020, in order to quell Satan’s “frenzy” during the coronavirus pandemic. Are exorcisms more prevalent during times of strife and panic? If so, what accounts for this?

These kinds of public exorcisms seem to occur in times when something has disrupted the social order.  The “golden age” of the demoniac in Europe was not the dark ages, but the centuries following the Protestant Reformation.  During Europe’s wars of religion, public exorcisms became a way of proving which religion was true.  Previously, church authorities had taught not to listen to demons, but suddenly everyone wanted to question possessed people and hear what the demons had to say!

In the United Kingdom, law enforcement has issued a warning that the Covid-19 pandemic may lead to people hurting children during exorcisms.  Religious responses to Corona include both claims that it is a punishment from God and an attack by Satan.  Both explanations are comforting because they imply that there is some intelligence controlling the pandemic and that it is not a random event that was likely inevitable in a globalized world.  Attributing the pandemic to supernatural beings also implies there is much more individual people can do to control it, either by appeasing a wrathful God or waging spiritual warfare against Satan.

What are some of the signs of demonic possession? How can you tell the difference between authentic possession and hoaxes or mental illness?

Some of the classic signs of demonic possession include the ability to speak in languages one has never studied or to know things one could not possibly know, aversion to holy objects, superhuman strength, and levitation.  However, some contemporary “deliverance ministers” will claim anything from diabetes to a stubborn personality can be evidence of demonic influence.

In some cases, there is overwhelming evidence of mental illness or hoaxing.  Martin Luther reportedly once exorcised a girl simply by kicking her––apparently the kick caused her to lose interest in playing the role of a demoniac.  But even when there is no evidence of these things, it doesn’t prove the presence of demons.  One of the themes of William Peter Blatty’s The Exorcist is that there is no way to empirically prove demonic possession is real. Father Karras invites the demon into him and his body is found with a look a peace on his face––I always thought this was because the only way a skeptic can be certain demons are real is to actually be possessed!

What is the most extreme case of demonic possession you came across?

One of the cases included in the book is testimony from a murder trial that occurred in Sudan in 1913.  A family believed their daughter was possessed and handed her over to a man claiming to be an exorcist.  The exorcist tied her to a tree and beat her for days, eventually strangling her to death.  At that time Sudan was under British control and the British judge is struggling to understand local beliefs about spirit possession.  He keeps asking witnesses why they saw a man beating a tied-up girl and did not intervene.  They answer that he said he was an exorcist and seemed like he knew what he was doing.  Eventually the exorcist tells the judge that he was possessed too and that his spirit went to war with the one in his patient.  The judge was not impressed by this explanation and the man was executed.

THE PENGUIN BOOK OF EXORCISMS takes a global and historical look at demonic possession. Briefly, what are the differences in how major world religions view demonic possession and exorcism?

Nearly all cultures believe in some form of spirit possession but the types of behaviours that are attributed to possession are different.  In many cultures ordinary illnesses such as fevers might be attributed to spirits.  This is true even in early Christianity.  In the Gospel of Luke, Jesus heals a woman who has been “crippled by a spirit” for eighteen years.  Christianity is somewhat unique in framing possession exclusively in demonic terms.  (From an anthropological perspective, speaking in tongues is a form of spirit possession, but Pentecostal Christians would not define it this way).

The book has several examples from cultures where exorcism is more about solving a problem than conquering the forces of Satan.  In Haitian Vodou, spirit possession is a normal part of the religion.  The exorcism described in the text was necessary only because sorcery was suspected.  In Hasidic Jewish stories about the miracle-worker the Baal Shem Tov, the Baal Shem Tov uses exorcism to restore harmony instead of casting demons into hell; spirits of the dead are helped to move on and demons are relocated to a well where they will not bother humans.  A psychiatrist observed a family from a Yakima Indian Reservation who performed a sort of exorcism ritual when their daughter was experiencing hallucinations.  The family believed ancestor spirits were calling their daughter to become a healer; the ritual essentially communicated to the ancestors, “Thanks, but no thanks.”  The psychiatrist did not assume the spirits literally existed but he reported that the hallucinations ended.

Many of us have read the William Peter Blatty book The Exorcist or have seen the subsequent film. Was it based on a true story? If so, what parts of the book/movie were true and what was created for dramatic effect?

In 1949 Blatty was a student at Georgetown University and he read an article in The Washington Post entitled, “Priest Frees Mt. Ranier Boy Reported Held in Devil’s Grip.”  Blatty was a doubting Catholic and his spiritual doubt is reflected in his character Father Karras.  Blatty wanted the story to be true because if demons were really possessing people that meant God might exist also.  We now know that the boy was from Cottage City, not Mount Ranier, and that the exorcism was performed at a Jesuit hospital in Saint Louis.  Georgetown University (where The Exorcist is set) is a Jesuit school.  Blatty persuaded the priests to show him a diary of the exorcism.  They also tutored him in demonology for about two years and so The Exorcist contains features from several famous exorcisms.

The boy in the Cottage City case experienced words that appeared to have been spontaneously carved into his body and this is depicted in the film.  The tradition of “testing” demoniacs with fake holy water dates back to sixteenth-century France, as does the idea that possessed people are extremely flexible and can contort their bodies (Blatty did not like that in the movie Regan’s head can spin all the way around, objecting that this would be impossible.)  Blatty studied the 1928 Earling case, which featured a woman tied to a bed, extreme projectile vomiting, and a form of levitation.  Finally, I think the ending was inspired by the exorcism of a convent of nuns in Loudun, France, in the seventeenth century.  In that case, Father Surin, one of the exorcists, believed he had become possessed himself.  All these cases are featured in the book.

Nearly everything in The Exorcist is based on something from Blatty’s life.  Chris MacNeil is based on Shirley MacLaine, who was once Blatty’s neighbor.  When I saw Blatty at the SXSW film festival in 2000 someone asked why the demon was Pazuzu.  He answered that he saw a statue of Pazuzu in a museum while he was working for the Foreign Service in the Middle East and that “it scared the hell out of him.”  

The possession of an entire convent of Ursuline nuns in the French town of Loudun in 1634 is one of the most famous and spectacular cases of exorcism in history.  Fueling the case was the trial of the Lothario priest Urbain Grandier, who was ultimately burned at the stake for witchcraft. Is there a plausible explanation of how an entire convent was allegedly possessed? What were some of the behaviors the nuns exhibited?

This was a very famous case and it has had numerous adaptations including Ken Russell’s film The Devils (1971) and Aldous Huxley’s novel The Devils of Loudun (1952).  The exorcisms went on for months and numerous people were invited to watch.  During these exorcisms the nuns made noises like animals, blasphemed, exposed themselves, and said things that, according to one observer, “would have astonished the inmates of the lowest brothel in the country.”  It was also alleged that they could understand languages they had never studied and could levitate.  Some of them vomited up bizarre substances including, in one case, a contract that had allegedly been signed by Grandier and several demons.

For all this, there were plenty of people who observed the nuns and concluded nothing supernatural was occurring.  Medical doctors diagnosed the nuns as suffering from furor uterinus––essentially a form of hysteria.  At one point several nuns confessed that they had faked the whole thing and begged for the exorcisms to stop––but of course the exorcists interpreted their confession as a demonic trick.  There is evidence that the phenomena in the convent began with innocent pranks that were likely carried out by teenage nuns who were extremely bored with life in a convent.  Grandier’s many enemies saw an opportunity and coached the nuns both into acting as though possessed and into accusing Grandier of bewitching them.  Grandier’s demonic pact was almost certainly planted and “vomited up” using slight of hand.  At the same time, some nuns seemed to genuinely believe they were possessed, especially Jeanne des Anges, the convent’s young mother superior.

Huxley felt that what happened in Loudun was an important case study in social psychology that could be used to interpret the fascist movements of twentieth-century Europe.  He concluded that on some level we do not want to be free, rational beings who are responsible for our actions and that sometimes we desire some larger force to engulf us and obliterate our personalities.  Huxley saw this as the motivation for people joining radical political movements and participating in mobs.  I actually find his conclusion more disturbing than demonic possession.

What historically has been the Catholic Church’s position on demonic possession and exorcism? Has it changed much over the centuries?

In medieval Europe exorcism was understood more as a disease of the body than a disease of the soul.  If someone was sick and wanted an exorcism there might be a number of different people or rituals that could help.  After the Protestant Reformation, Protestants mocked these practices an unbiblical and essentially “witchcraft.”  One way the Catholic Church responded was to make official protocols for exorcism that were published in the Ritual Romanum in 1614.  These specified there was only one way to do an exorcism—that it could only be done by priests, and only with the permission of their bishop.  During the Counter-Reformation, demonic possession was re-imagined as a spiritual condition and it came to be associated with saintliness.  The idea was that demons attacked deeply religious people because they saw them as more of a threat than sinners.

The Catholic Church is designed to be a unified global church that also has different local expressions.  This is why the decision to approve an exorcism is left to the discretion of the local bishop: In one country an exorcism could be an embarrassment for the church and in another it could be a political asset.  In early modern France there were examples of bishops and cardinals who saw exorcisms as opportunities to advance their political goals, such as pressuring the crown to condemn Protestant Huguenots.  But in the Unites States, Catholics have been a minority and Protestants have portrayed them as superstitious immigrants.  Accordingly, American bishops have traditionally viewed exorcism as an embarrassing matter that should be kept secret.  When news spread of the 1928 exorcism, many American Catholic authorities were horrified.

All this changed after the movie The Exorcist came out in 1973.  Suddenly everyone thought they were possessed and wanted an exorcism.  And if the Catholic Church wouldn’t do it, there were now plenty of Pentecostals and Evangelical “deliverance ministers” who were happy to cast out demons.  In a few decades exorcism went from being a liability for the Church to being asset and the exorcists were invited in from out of the cold.  The International Association of Exorcists is a group founded by Father Gabrielle Amorth in 1991 (Amorth was also a huge fan of The Exorcist.)  In several interviews Amorth claimed his organization was being snubbed by The Vatican.  But in 2014 it was given recognition by the Vatican’s Congregation of Clergy.  Currently, exorcism seems to be coming back in a big way, especially among more conservative Catholics.

Premier issue of “The Journal of Gods and Monsters”: The Monstrosity of Displacement

I’m pleased to announce the first issue of The Journal of Gods and Monsters is now available.
Monsters are often defined as those unfortunate beings displaced from the “normal,” and in the inaugural issue of The Journal of Gods and Monsters, we are exploring this displacement and the role of religious traditions in its construction, maintenance, and complication. Such beings labeled as monsters might be displaced from biology, such as the cynocephalic protagonist of the Greek Life of St. Christopher. Then again, a monster’s displacement could be cultural, as seen in contemporary efforts by some Burmese Buddhists to displace and monstrosize the Rohingya minority. Or it could be soteriological, like the transhistorical phenomenon of Jews and Muslims being made into monsters via their exclusion from some structures of Christian salvation.
In this special issue, we present three methodologically-diverse submissions that tackle the issue of monstrosity and displacement from a wide range of regional and temporal arenas, including 1960s West Virginia, 16th-century France, and 1940s science fiction literature. We also present reviews of new and important materials in the field of Monster Theory.
Published: 2020-07-20

Recommended Reading on World War I, Horror and the Supernatural

I’ve read and watched a lot on World War II over the years, since I was a child actually, watching films with my dad growing up. World War I is another story. I’ve only recently have I taken a closer look at the Great War in more depth. In addition to recommending a viewing of 1917, there are some resources I’d like to recommend that explore World War I in connection with horror and the supernatural. These include:

A Supernatural War: Magic, Divination, and Faith during the First World War
by Owen Davies

It was a commonly expressed view during the First World War that the conflict had seen a major revival of “superstitious” beliefs and practices.

Churches expressed concerns about the wearing of talismans and amulets, the international press paid considerable interest to the pronouncements of astrologers and prophets, and the authorities in several countries periodically clamped down on fortune tellers and mediums due to concerns over their effect on public morale. Out on the battlefields, soldiers of all nations sought to protect themselves through magical and religious rituals, and, on the home front, people sought out psychics and occult practitioners for news of the fate of their distant loved ones or communication with their spirits. Even away from concerns about the war, suspected witches continued to be abused and people continued to resort to magic and magical practitioners for personal protection, love, and success.

Uncovering and examining beliefs, practices, and contemporary opinions regarding the role of the supernatural in the war years, Owen Davies explores the broader issues regarding early twentieth-century society in the West, the psychology of the supernatural during wartime, and the extent to which the war cast a spotlight on the widespread continuation of popular belief in magic. A Supernatural War reveals the surprising stories of extraordinary people in a world caught up with the promise of occult powers.

Shell Shock Cinema: Weimar Culture and the Wounds of War
by Anton Kaes

Shell Shock Cinema explores how the classical German cinema of the Weimar Republic was haunted by the horrors of World War I and the the devastating effects of the nation’s defeat. In this exciting new book, Anton Kaes argues that masterworks such as The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, Nosferatu, The Nibelungen, and Metropolis, even though they do not depict battle scenes or soldiers in combat, engaged the war and registered its tragic aftermath. These films reveal a wounded nation in post-traumatic shock, reeling from a devastating defeat that it never officially acknowledged, let alone accepted.

Kaes uses the term “shell shock”–coined during World War I to describe soldiers suffering from nervous breakdowns–as a metaphor for the psychological wounds that found expression in Weimar cinema. Directors like Robert Wiene, F. W. Murnau, and Fritz Lang portrayed paranoia, panic, and fear of invasion in films peopled with serial killers, mad scientists, and troubled young men. Combining original close textual analysis with extensive archival research, Kaes shows how this post-traumatic cinema of shell shock transformed extreme psychological states into visual expression; how it pushed the limits of cinematic representation with its fragmented story lines, distorted perspectives, and stark lighting; and how it helped create a modernist film language that anticipated film noir and remains incredibly influential today.

A compelling contribution to the cultural history of trauma, Shell Shock Cinema exposes how German film gave expression to the loss and acute grief that lay behind Weimar’s sleek façade.

Then there’s a volume by my friend and colleague who has been interviewed a few times here at TheoFantastique on the following volume and more:

Wasteland: The Great War and the Origins of Modern Horror
by W. Scott Poole

Historian and Bram Stoker Award Nominee W. Scott Poole traces the confluence of military history, technology, and art that gave us modern horror films and literature.

From Nosferatu to Frankenstein’s monster, from Fritz Lang to James Whale, the touchstones of horror can all trace their roots to the bloodshed of the First World War. Bram Stoker Award nominee W. Scott Poole traces the confluence of military history, technology, and art in the wake of World War I to show how overwhelming carnage gave birth to a wholly new art form: modern horror films and literature.

Two items on horror and psychology

A couple of items have appeared over the last week or two that are worth noting in regards to horror and psychology. The first is “An Infectious Curiosity: Morbid Curiosity and Media Preferences During a Pandemic” published in Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture. This article was picked up by a lot of popular media outlets, such as the Consequences of Sound website, who summarize the academic article in the following terms:

The best way to prepare for a pandemic is to go through a different pandemic, and it doesn’t hurt to participate in some alien invasions or the odd zombie apocalypse. According to a new study, horror fans and “morbidly curious” people have shown “greater resilience during the pandemic.”

The research into psychological coping was conducted by scientists at the University of Chicago, Penn State, and Denmark’s Aarhus University. It hasn’t yet been peer reviewed, but a preprint has been giving the internet goosebumps. By looking at 310 individuals, researchers came to the conclusion that “exposure to frightening fictions allow audiences to practice effective coping strategies that can be beneficial in real-world situations.” They wrote,

“We found that fans of horror films exhibited greater resilience during the pandemic and that fans of “prepper” genres (alien-invasion, apocalyptic, and zombie films) exhibited both greater resilience and preparedness. We also found that [the] trait morbid curiosity was associated with positive resilience and interest in pandemic films during the pandemic.”

The second item comes from the journal Preternature: Critical and Historical Studies on the Preternatural, in a piece titled “Grotesque Gaming: The Monstrous in Online Worlds.” This essay notes the similarities between gaming and religion, and has been discussed in places like Big Think, which wrote:

A befuddling trend in the world of gaming culture has emerged in the coronavirus era. In the midst of a deadly pandemic, economic decline, social injustice, and the resulting social unrest, some of the most downloaded video game genres in recent months have been horror games designed to inspire terror and anxiety. For example, “Resident Evil 3,” “The Last of Us Part 2,” “Nioh,” and “Doom Eternal” have all seen a spike in downloads.

As it turns out, there may be a psychological explanation. Some researchers think that inserting yourself into a virtual horror anti-fantasy could offer relief during times of stress.

Scientific journal article: “Possession myth as a lens for understanding cultural and psychological evolution”

Boutwell, Brian B., Mathias Clasen & Jens Kjeldgaard-Christiansen. 2020. “We are legion”: Possession myth as a lens for understanding cultural and psychological evolution. Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences.
doi:10.1037/ebs0000197.

In most religious traditions, there exists the conception that human beings can lose their freedom of will to an invading consciousness. We argue that possession myths emerge from evolved mental architecture and reflect a constellation of deep-seated beliefs about cognition, consciousness, and mind−body dualism. We also consider why possession is almost always considered frightening and aversive, thus explaining why the horror genre, and audiovisual horror in particular, has embraced the trope of possession. We analyze how possession works in 2 examples: The Exorcist and Supernatural. Finally, we conclude by briefly discussing the possibility that possession mythology represents an interesting test case for examining the origins of culture in general. Culture, as others have also suggested, exists first as an outgrowth of human psychological faculties but can then come to exert top-down causal influence on those same
faculties.

Theme of Monsters and the Bible in Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology

Monsters and the Bible

Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology

https://journals.sagepub.com/toc/INT/current

Vol. 74, No. 2 (April 2020)

On the Impossibility and Inevitability of Monsters in Biblical Thought
Kim Paffenroth
After general considerations of what constitutes a “monster,” this essay examines the examples of “monsters” in the Bible, showing that the Bible does not as frequently depict such beings as do other mythologies. The implications of this for understanding the biblical outlook on creation in general are considered, leading to the conclusion that in fact, in the Bible, it is God who is a monster, or at least, on the side of monsters, and is not to be relied on to eradicate them.

The Good, the God, and the Ugly: The Role of the Beloved Monster in the Ancient Near East and the Hebrew Bible
Ryan S. Higgins Ancient
Near Eastern texts teem with horrifying and grotesque beings that pose some significant threat to the cosmos, humanity, and its institutions. Adopting Noël Carroll’s definition, such beings are monsters: interstitial not only physiologically and ontologically, but also cosmically and morally. This essay takes a comparative and literary approach to beloved monsters in Ugaritic, Mesopotamian, and Hebrew Bible texts. It suggests that in Ugarit and Mesopotamia, such monsters play a crucial role in advancing the goals of antipathic heroes while maintaining the integrity of sympathetic deities. It then considers the beloved monster in the Hebrew Bible and its interpretations. Finally, the essay makes note of the phenomenon’s transformation in contemporary speculative fiction. The essay argues that the beloved monster in Ugarit and Mesopotamia keeps together a fragmented cosmos, while in the Hebrew Bible it refracts through the cracks in a fragmented God.

Leviathan to Lucifer: What Biblical Monsters (Still) Reveal
Kelly J. Murphy
Monsters and the monstrous show up in Scripture and outside the pages of Scripture. Two of the most famous biblical monsters—Leviathan and Satan—appear and reappear in different forms, and, at times, their stories are merged into one. A focus on Leviathan and Satan in Scripture helps readers to see the different ways the biblical texts depict monsters and, especially, the relationship between humans, monsters, and the divine. As these creatures (re)appear in popular culture, often drawing on their scriptural representations, they continue to provide a space for audiences to ask: what makes a monster and what do these monsters reveal?

Constructing Imperial and National Identities: Monstrous and Human Bodies in Book of Watchers, Daniel, and 2 Maccabees
Anathea Portier-Young
Monster theory illuminates the construction of imperial and national identities in the portrayals of monstrous and human bodies in three early Jewish texts: Book of Watchers, Daniel, and 2 Maccabees. Book of Watchers expresses anxiety about Judean/Jewish identity in the shadow of empire through its portrayal of a vulnerable humanity terrorized by voracious giants and their demonic spirits. Daniel dehumanizes empire and its agents, imaging empire as a colossal statue, an animalistic were-king, and a series of monstrous beasts, while one like a human being poses an alternative to imperial rule. Second Maccabees, by contrast, demythologizes, decapitates, dismembers, and disintegrates the imperial body in order to portray the integral Judean political body (and soul) as mature, pure, capable, and ordered.

Holy Terror: Confronting Our Fears and Loving Our Movie Monsters
Craig Detweiler While the natural world may scare us, more frightening beasts arise when we neglect our calling to care for creation and “play god” via technology. From King Kong, Frankenstein, and Godzilla to recent films like The Babadook, The Shape of Water and Us, the most enduring monsters provoke humility, evoke empathy, and prompt us to love rather than fear. These holy terrors can offer an encounter with what Rudolf Otto famously called the mysterium tremendum.

Mapping the End: On Monsters and Maps in the Book of Revelation
Tina Pippin The Book of Revelation is a map of the end time. Its apocalyptic story is full of monsters, from the throne room to the abyss. Using new studies in literary cartography and spatiality studies, I argue that the text of Revelation can be read as a map, and is itself a monster.

Graham Humphreys Horror Art and Stained Glass Windows

The current edition of RUE MORGUE magazine, Issue 193 (March/April 2020), currently available on newsstands in the print edition, and free in digital format, caught my eye given the lead story titled “The Horror Art of Graham Humphreys.” I’m a big fan of horror, monstrous and fantasy art, and have a few books in my library on this topic. The article includes an interview with Humphreys, and he makes some interesting comments that draw upon religion in terms of the history and influences on horror art.

“I consider film posters to be an extension of the Old European theatre posters. I’d go even further and say that the stained glass windows in European churches were the origin of the modern film poster – brightly coloured advertisements for fantasy and horror. It’s no coincidence that my first true genre poster for the UK’s release of The Evil Dead looks like a stained glass window.”

A little later he refers to “the temple of poster art”.

Humphrey’s comments provide an interesting and perhaps unexpected insight into this art form.

 

Titles of Interest – “Tracking Classical Monsters in Popular Culture”

I learned about this volume from the blog of Steve Wiggins, a fellow monster scholar. The overall topic is very appealing to me, and the discussion of Harryhausen’s monsters (or creatures as he preferred to call them), make this a volume I must add to my library.

Tracking Classical Monsters
Liz Gloyn
Bloomsbury Academic, 2019

What is it about ancient monsters that popular culture still finds so enthralling? Why do the monsters of antiquity continue to stride across the modern world? In this book, the first in-depth study of how post-classical societies use the creatures from ancient myth, Liz Gloyn reveals the trends behind how we have used monsters since the 1950s to the present day, and considers why they have remained such a powerful presence in our shared cultural imagination. She presents a new model for interpreting the extraordinary vitality that classical monsters have shown, and their enormous adaptability in finding places to dwell in popular culture without sacrificing their connection to the ancient world.

Her argument takes her readers through a comprehensive tour of monsters on film and television, from the much-loved creations of Ray Harryhausen in Clash of the Titans to the monster of the week in Hercules: The Legendary Journeys, before looking in detail at the afterlives of the Medusa and the Minotaur. She develops a broad theory of the ancient monster and its life after antiquity, investigating its relation to gender, genre and space to offer a bold and novel exploration of what keeps drawing us back to these mythical beasts. From the siren to the centaur, all monster lovers will find something to enjoy in this stimulating and accessible book.

Journal article explores the psychology of possession in connection with horror

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mathias Clasen, who has been interviewed here previously on his biocultural approach to the study of horror, is the coauthor of a journal article of interest. It appears in the journal Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences and is titled “’We are legion’: Possession myth as a lens for understanding cultural and psychological evolution’. Here’s the abstract:

In most religious traditions, there exists the conception that human beings can lose their freedom of will to an invading consciousness. We argue that possession myths emerge from evolved mental architecture and reflect a constellation of deep-seated beliefs about cognition, consciousness, and mind−body dualism. We also consider why possession is almost always considered frightening and aversive, thus explaining why the horror genre, and audiovisual horror in particular, has embraced the trope of possession. We analyze how possession works in 2 examples: The Exorcist (Blatty & Friedkin, 1973) and Supernatural (Kripke et al., 2005–2020). Finally, we conclude by briefly discussing the possibility that possession mythology represents an interesting test case for examining the origins of culture in general. Culture, as others have also suggested, exists first as an outgrowth of human psychological faculties but can then come to exert top-down causal influence on those same faculties.

RSS for Posts RSS for Comments