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Something Wicked -

Something Wicked

Witchcraft in Movies, Television, and Popular Culture
Buch | Hardcover
328 Seiten
2024
Bloomsbury Publishing USA (Verlag)
979-8-7651-2229-7 (ISBN)
CHF 165,85 inkl. MwSt
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An anthology of essays that deal with Witchcraft and the figure of the Witch, as they have been presented in motion pictures, television, and popular culture, in order to understand how, why, and when the common anti-Witchcraft/ anti-Witch attitude evolved.

Mainstream tales of Witchcraft, including modern movies, novels, TV series, and other examples of our popular culture, more often than not express the traditional notion of a Witch as a wild, dangerous, untamable, “nasty” woman, obsessed with a desire for power to control all around her, in most narratives such a hunger presented as a negative. In truth, The Witch is a symbol of ‘threatening evil’ only to those men and women who accept a conservative sensibility. For members of either gender who do not, The Witch is perceived as hero and role model.

This collection begins with the Biblical figure of Lilith, followed by Morgan le Fey from Arthurian legend/ myth in literature as well as in popular culture, followed by the more contemporary depictions of the Witch that start to appear in the 1960s; for example, in the Bewitched sitcom, the Star Wars franchise, Harry Potter, and even the television show Scooby-Doo. International depictions of the Witch are discussed, including Italy’s Dario Argento’s films, Suspiria and Inferno. The final section of this collection focuses on the most iconic depictions of the Witch produced during the 21st century, including A Discovery of Witches, Penny Dreadful, Game of Thrones and the history of the Witch in films by the Walt Disney studio, from its origins more than a century ago to the latest releases, arguing that here, if perhaps surprisingly, we discover the most fair and balanced portraits of Witches in the history of film and TV.

Douglas Brode, now retired, was the Creator/Coordinator of the Film Classics Program for The Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University, USA. He is a novelist, screenwriter, playwright, film historian, multi-award winning journalist, and multi-award winning educator. Leah Deyneka holds a master’s degree in 19th-century literature from King’s College, London, UK, and has written extensively on literature, film, media, and popular culture.

Introduction: The Villain Still Pursues Us
Douglas Brode (Syracuse University, USA)
1. “Seen in the Sphere of Lilith”: Lilith as the Progenitor of Witches and Other “Nasty Women”
Jessica Haight-Angelo (Independent Scholar)
2. “In My Time I Have Been Called Many Things”: Morgan le Fay in Popular Culture
Marta Cobb (University of Leeds, UK)
3. Through a Lens Darkly: Dreyer’s Witches
James Morrison (Claremont McKenna College, USA)
4. Sorcery in the Suburbs: Bewitched, Resistance and Gender Transgression
Fran Pheasant-Kelly (Wolverhampton University, USA)
5. Rosemary’s Baby: Rosemary’s Body and the Devil Inside
Jeremy Carr (Arizona State University, USA)
6. Whose Law is it Anyway?: Detection, Magic, and the Uncanny Spaces of The Wicker Man
Kevin M. Flanagan (George Mason University, USA)
7. The Nightsisters of Dathomir: How Witchcraft Came to the Star Wars Universe
Cyrus R. K. Patell (New York University, USA)
8. Sirius Black and the Wizard World: Power and Bias in Harry Potter
Hafsa Alkhudairi (Birkbeck College, University of London, UK)
9. Disenchantment, Haunting, and The Witch’s Ghost!
Jeffrey McCambridge (Ohio University, USA)
10. Suzy, We Always Knew You: The Timeless Terror of Witches in Old and New Suspiria
Allison Craven (James Cook University, Australia)
11. Bodies of Knowledge and Bodies of Power: Dario Argento's Inferno
Dennin Ellis (Ohio State University, USA)
12. “The Mark May be Gone but the Spell is Still There”: Dis/abling Magic and Gender in Miyazaki’s Howl’s Moving Castle
Melissa Guadrón (Ohio State University, USA)
13. Shadow of Suspicion: Representations of Witchcraft and Misogyny Across Cultures
Natalie Rosiek (University of Buffalo, USA)
14. “A Woman Who Walks in the Footsteps of the Goddess:” Genre, Adaptation, and A Discovery of Witches’ Transformation of the Cinematic Witch
Susan Aronstein (University of Wyoming, USA)
15. “So the Darkness Spoke”: The Witch as a Compromised Figure of Liberation in Penny Dreadful
Jack W. Shear (Binghamton University, USA)
16. No Safe Spaces: The American Colonial West as Historical Horror in Robert Eggers’s The Witch.
Garrett Castleberry (Mid-America Christian University, USA)
17. Gaia’s Vengeance: Ecofeminist Horror in Apostle (2018)
Kerri-Leanne Taylor (University of Miami, USA)
18. A Witch in Westeros: Melisandre, Compulsory Maternity, and the ‘Snow White’ Factor
Heidi Breuer (California State University, San Marcos, USA)
19. Something Wicked This Way Comes: Walt Disney’s Wonderful World of Witchcraft
Douglas Brode (Syracuse University, USA)

Index

Erscheinungsdatum
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 152 x 229 mm
Themenwelt Kunst / Musik / Theater Film / TV
Sachbuch/Ratgeber Gesundheit / Leben / Psychologie Esoterik / Spiritualität
Geisteswissenschaften Religion / Theologie Weitere Religionen
Sozialwissenschaften
ISBN-13 979-8-7651-2229-7 / 9798765122297
Zustand Neuware
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