Satanism and Feminism in Popular Culture

Miranda Corcoran (red.)

Satanism and Feminism in Popular Culture

Not Today Satan

This book constitutes a timely and necessary intervention in the academic study of Satanism. At the same time, the book also constitutes a vital addition to the field of Gothic and Horror Studies. Although recent years have witnessed a revival of interest in figures such as the witch, the zombie and the vampire, Satan and his acolytes have been largely ignored (aside from where they overlap with the witch). This volume seeks to address this lacuna in Gothic Studies by examining how Satanism—particularly as it relates to issues of gender and sexuality—has shaped both the aesthetic and thematic content of horror media over the past half century.
Redacteur

Miranda Corcoran

Miranda Corcoran is a lecturer in the Department of English, University College Cork. She is the author of Witchcraft and Adolescence in American Popular Culture: Teen Witches (University of Wales Press, 2022), The Craft (Auteur/Liverpool University Press, 2023), and Haunted States: An American Gothic Guidebook (2024).
Titel
Satanism and Feminism in Popular Culture
Subtitel
Not Today Satan
Redacteur
Miranda Corcoran
Prijs
€ 134,00
ISBN
9789463721295
Uitvoering
Hardback
Aantal pagina's
304
Publicatiedatum
Afmetingen
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Serie
Horror and Gothic Media Cultures
Categorieën
Contemporary Society
Cultural Studies
Fan and Audience Studies
Gender and Sexuality Studies
Media Studies
Discipline
Film, Media, and Communication

Recensies

Wicked witches, hexing housewives, and persecuted Puritans! The trope of the Satanic witch has been approached as both a misogynistic tool of control and a source of forbidden empowerment. These essays skillfully dissect the significance of the Satanic woman as reflected and refracted across literature, television, film, and music.
Joseph P. Laycock, associate professor of religious studies at Texas State University.