Preface to the Second Edition
Part I Faces of the Monstrous-Feminine: Abjection and the Maternal
Introduction
1 Kristeva, Femininity, Abjection
2 Horror and the Archaic Mother: Alien
3 Woman as Possessed Monster: The Exorcist
4 Woman as Monstrous Womb: The Brood
5 Woman as Vampire: The Hunger
6 Woman as Witch: Carrie
Part II Medusa’s Head: Psychoanalytic Theory and the
Femme Castratrice
Preface
7 ‘Little Hans’ Reconsidered: or ‘The Tale of Mother’s Terrifying Widdler’
8 Medusa’s Head: the Vagina Dentata and Freudian theory
9 The femme castratrice: I spit on your grave, sisters
10 The Castrating Mother: Psycho
11 The Medusa’s Gaze
Part III Revolt of the Monstrous-Feminine: Embracing the Nonhuman
Introduction: The Nonhuman Turn an Women’s Horror of the New Millennium
12 Coming of Age: The Monstrous-Feminine as Virginal Dentata: Ginger Snaps: (2000), Teeth (2007), Jennifer’s Body (2009).
13 The Monstrous-Feminine as Avenging Zombie: The Girl With All The Gifts (2016), The Dark (2018), Atlantics (2019).
14 The Monstrous-Feminine as Uncanny Creatrix: Border (2018), Little Joe (2019), Titane (2021).
Bibliography
Filmography
Index
Barbara Creed is Redmond Barry Distinguished Professor Emeritus at the University of Melbourne. She is the author of seven books, including Darwin’s Screens: Evolutionary Aesthetics, Time and Sexual Display in the Cinema (2009); and Stray: Human- Animal Ethics in the Anthropocene (2017). She is the director of the Human Rights and Animal Ethics Research Network (HRAE). She has been on the boards of Writers Week, the Melbourne International Film Festival and the Melbourne Queer Film Festival.
"Barbara Creed’s The Monstrous-Feminine is one of the most
influential books to emerge in the early 90s. The
Monstrous-Feminine defined how our generation and our discipline
viewed the horror genre. In this new edition, Creed does it again,
recontextualizing the conception of the monstrous-feminine to track
many of the evolutions in the horror genre and this revised edition
will continue to shape our understanding of the horror genre in the
new millennium."
Aaron Kramer, Professor, and Director of the SFSU School of Cinema,
San Francisco State University"Creed’s The Monstrous-Feminine
radically changed the logic of abjection and how it is linked with
women. In her profoundly original analysis of horror films, Creed
upended a concept emanating from psychoanalysis, traditionally
perceived as scaffolding supporting patriarchy, to demonstrate how
women could be seen as the agents of abjection rather than as its
passive victims. In this new edition Creed expands and updates the
filmography to include horror films created by women to augment the
ways in which the monstrous-feminine functions deliciously as
patriarchy’s retribution."
Sneja Gunew, Professor Emerita (English/Social Justice Institute),
University of British Columbia, Canada"In this new and expanded
edition of the classic The Monstrous-Feminine: Film, Feminism,
Psychoanalysis, Barbara Creed adds a crucial monstrous-feminine
register: the nonhuman. With the nonhuman, female horror touches
the profound source of abjection. Twenty-first Century feminist
horror, Creed shows, introduces a series of startling tropes: the
metamorphizing adolescent girl, the female zombie, and the
creatrix. Together these female monsters question the stability and
uniqueness of the human. In an age at which anthropogenic and
patriarchal harms threaten the very survival of the planet,
embracing the nonhuman becomes a remedial, even liberating
gesture."
Anat Pick, Reader in Film, Queen Mary University of London"Thirty
years after the publication of Barbara Creed’s classic text, which
revolutionised approaches to the analysis of women in horror films,
the monstrous- feminine looms large. This updated edition, which
includes entirely new chapters, interrogates the concept in
contemporary contexts through a range of diverse films directed by
women, and through the exploration of recent progressive social
movements. What emerges are newer "faces", more nuanced forms of
horror that speak to a global audience and that revitalise the
force of the abject in more expanded ways that continue to revolt
against patriarchal order."
Rina Arya, Professor of Visual Culture and Theory, University of
Huddersfield
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