Description

Book Synopsis

This book is an original and innovative study of how Gothic nostalgia and toxic memory

are used to underpin and promote the ongoing culture wars and populist politics in

contemporary popular culture. The essays collected here cover topics from the spectral to

the ecological, deep fakes to toxic ableism, Mary Poppins to John Wick to reveal

how the use of an imaginary past to shape the present, creates truly Gothic times that we

can never escape. These ‘hungry ghosts’ from the past find resonance with the Gothic

which speaks equally of a past that often not only haunts the present but will not let it

escape its grasp. This collection will look at the confluence between various kinds of toxic

nostalgia and popular culture to suggest the ways in which contemporary populism has

resurrected ideological monsters from the grave to gorge on the present and any possibility

of change that the future might represent.




Table of Contents
Acknowledgements

1. Introduction

Simon Bacon and Katarzyna Bronk-Bacon

PART I:

FRAMEWORKS OF GOTHIC NOSTALGIA AND TOXICITY

2. 1408 and the Structure of Haunting

Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock

3. Toxic Nostalgia in Contemporary Gothic Horror

Brandon R. Grafius

4. Toxic Nostalgia in the Wake of the Postmodern Turn

Matthias Stephan

5. Deepfake Sockpuppets: The Toxic Realitiesof a Weaponised Internet — Katy Wareham-Morris

PART II:

THE TOXIC SCREEN

6. The Nostalgia of Setting, Sex and Sound in the Wicker Men Films

Lauren Rosewarne

7. The American Dream and American Nightmare: The Toxic Pursuit of Nostalgia and Happiness Presented in Poltergeist (1982) and Poltergeist (2015)

Rob Mclaughlin

8. You’re Too Focused on Where Youve Been:Uncanny Nostalgia in Mary Poppins Returns Daniel Kasper

9. Pulling Our Strings: The Gothic Nostalgia of Luca Guadagninos Suspiria

J. Simpson

10. “I Just Wanted to Preserve It Just as It is”: Gothic Nostalgia in The Watcher

Abel Fenwick

PART III:

IDENTITY

11. Prevention is Better Than Cure: Anachronistic Therapists and Toxic Wellness

Catherine Pugh

12.Patriarchy Then and Now — with a Twist: The Postmodern Horror of Alex Garland’s Men M. Keith Booker and Isra Daraiseh

13. “But now, yeah, I’m thinking I’m back”: The All-consuming Gothic Nostalgia in the John Wick Franchise

Simon Bacon

14. Gothic Nostalgia in Louise Welsh’s The Cutting Room and The Second Cut

Martyn Colebrook

15. Toxic Ableism and Gothic Nostalgia in Fanfiction about Mermaids

Martine Mussies

PART IV:

ENVIRONMENTS

16. Of Greed and the Undead Past: Rahi Anil Barve’s Tumbbad as an Exercise in Toxic Nostalgia

Aparajita Hazra

17. Soviet Nostalgia in the Vampire Trilogy A Tale of the Soviet Vampire by Aleksandr Slepakov (2014-18)

Patrycja Pichnicka-Trivedi

18. “Oh no. Not again!”: Toxic Nostalgia and Antisemetic Recursive Memory in Ghost Stories

Vicky Brewster

19. Extremist Nostalgia: Mike Mas Novellas as 21st Century Far-Right Gothic

Helen Young

Notes on Contributors

Gothic Nostalgia: The Uses of Toxic Memory in

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    A Hardback by Simon Bacon, Katarzyna Bronk-Bacon

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      Publisher: Springer International Publishing AG
      Publication Date: 31/01/2024
      ISBN13: 9783031438516, 978-3031438516
      ISBN10: 3031438515

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This book is an original and innovative study of how Gothic nostalgia and toxic memory

      are used to underpin and promote the ongoing culture wars and populist politics in

      contemporary popular culture. The essays collected here cover topics from the spectral to

      the ecological, deep fakes to toxic ableism, Mary Poppins to John Wick to reveal

      how the use of an imaginary past to shape the present, creates truly Gothic times that we

      can never escape. These ‘hungry ghosts’ from the past find resonance with the Gothic

      which speaks equally of a past that often not only haunts the present but will not let it

      escape its grasp. This collection will look at the confluence between various kinds of toxic

      nostalgia and popular culture to suggest the ways in which contemporary populism has

      resurrected ideological monsters from the grave to gorge on the present and any possibility

      of change that the future might represent.




      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgements

      1. Introduction

      Simon Bacon and Katarzyna Bronk-Bacon

      PART I:

      FRAMEWORKS OF GOTHIC NOSTALGIA AND TOXICITY

      2. 1408 and the Structure of Haunting

      Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock

      3. Toxic Nostalgia in Contemporary Gothic Horror

      Brandon R. Grafius

      4. Toxic Nostalgia in the Wake of the Postmodern Turn

      Matthias Stephan

      5. Deepfake Sockpuppets: The Toxic Realitiesof a Weaponised Internet — Katy Wareham-Morris

      PART II:

      THE TOXIC SCREEN

      6. The Nostalgia of Setting, Sex and Sound in the Wicker Men Films

      Lauren Rosewarne

      7. The American Dream and American Nightmare: The Toxic Pursuit of Nostalgia and Happiness Presented in Poltergeist (1982) and Poltergeist (2015)

      Rob Mclaughlin

      8. You’re Too Focused on Where Youve Been:Uncanny Nostalgia in Mary Poppins Returns Daniel Kasper

      9. Pulling Our Strings: The Gothic Nostalgia of Luca Guadagninos Suspiria

      J. Simpson

      10. “I Just Wanted to Preserve It Just as It is”: Gothic Nostalgia in The Watcher

      Abel Fenwick

      PART III:

      IDENTITY

      11. Prevention is Better Than Cure: Anachronistic Therapists and Toxic Wellness

      Catherine Pugh

      12.Patriarchy Then and Now — with a Twist: The Postmodern Horror of Alex Garland’s Men M. Keith Booker and Isra Daraiseh

      13. “But now, yeah, I’m thinking I’m back”: The All-consuming Gothic Nostalgia in the John Wick Franchise

      Simon Bacon

      14. Gothic Nostalgia in Louise Welsh’s The Cutting Room and The Second Cut

      Martyn Colebrook

      15. Toxic Ableism and Gothic Nostalgia in Fanfiction about Mermaids

      Martine Mussies

      PART IV:

      ENVIRONMENTS

      16. Of Greed and the Undead Past: Rahi Anil Barve’s Tumbbad as an Exercise in Toxic Nostalgia

      Aparajita Hazra

      17. Soviet Nostalgia in the Vampire Trilogy A Tale of the Soviet Vampire by Aleksandr Slepakov (2014-18)

      Patrycja Pichnicka-Trivedi

      18. “Oh no. Not again!”: Toxic Nostalgia and Antisemetic Recursive Memory in Ghost Stories

      Vicky Brewster

      19. Extremist Nostalgia: Mike Mas Novellas as 21st Century Far-Right Gothic

      Helen Young

      Notes on Contributors

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