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A collection of essays about Indigeneity and horror in cinema, literature, and beyond.
How did Indigeneity come to be horrifying? Think of the "Indian burial ground" trope, a staple of 1970s horror cinema, not to mention decades of Western films and fictions that made "savage Indians" the face of fear in popular culture. Can horror do something else in the hands of Indigenous people? Creators such as Eden Robinson and Jeff Barnaby have self-consciously turned to horror to tell new kinds of stories, stories that question who is a monster and what constitutes the monstrous.
Horror and Indigeneity explores representations of Indigenous people in settler horror texts and in the growing corpus of horror by Indigenous writers and filmmakers. Widely spanning time periods and media, the contributors to this edited volume address themes such as cannibalism, eco-horror, historical trauma, and contemporary anti-racism as they relate to classical horror cinema and recent works such as The Dead Can't Dance, Lovecraft Country, and Stephen Graham Jones's The Only Good Indians. Also featuring interviews with Jones and director T. J. Cuthand, Horror and Indigeneity rethinks the terror of the Other in potent and provactive terms.
Murray Leeder is an assistant lecturer in film and English at the University of Alberta. He is the author of Horror Film: A Critical Introduction and The Modern Supernatural and the Beginnings of Cinema.
Gary D. Rhodes is a professor of media production at Oklahoma Baptist University, a filmmaker, and a poet. He is the author of Vampires in Silent Cinema and coeditor of Film by Design: The Art of the Movie Poster.
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