Showing posts with label Horror Homeroom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Horror Homeroom. Show all posts

Friday, June 28, 2024

CFP Horror Homeroom Special Issue #9: Body Horror (8/18/2024)

Horror Homeroom Special Issue #9: Body Horror


deadline for submissions: August 18, 2024

full name / name of organization: Horror Homeroom

contact email: dek7@lehigh.edu

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2024/06/18/horror-homeroom-special-issue-9-body-horror


Though the term was coined in 1986, ‘body horror’ dates back to the beginnings of Gothic literature—Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818); Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1886)—and extends into contemporary fiction, film, and new media. From seminal works including David Cronenberg’s The Fly (1986) to contemporary zombie films and portrayals of the digital-corporeal connection, as in the Unfriended franchise and Jane Schoenbrun’s recent I Saw the TV Glow, embodiment remains central to the horror genre. Mirroring the porousness of the body itself, the category evades compartmentalization and definition.

This special issue will contend with horror’s bodies in all their transgressive fluidity. We are open to essays exploring any texts that could broadly be considered ‘body horror,’ including fiction, film, and new media. We also welcome a variety of theoretical approaches and disciplinary methods. Lastly, since body horror is a global phenomenon, we hope to put together an issue that makes international connections.

Potential topics include (but are not limited to):

  • medical experimentation
  • shape-shifting/transformation
  • cannibalism
  • identity and embodiment
  • disease
  • biopolitics and necropolitics
  • digital bodies
  • posthumanism
  • key directors (Cronenberg, Ducournau, Soska sisters, etc.)
  • body horror and pornography
  • New Extremity films
  • pregnancy/reproduction
  • environmental impacts on the body
  • the role of camp and humor
  • torture porn

Please send an abstract of no more than 500 words along with a brief bio to Elizabeth Erwin (ele210@lehigh.edu), Lauren Gilmore (ltg221@lehigh.edu), and Dawn Keetley (dek7@lehigh.edu) by August 18, 2024. We will select essays to include in the special issue within two-three weeks and notify everyone who submitted an abstract. Completed essays, which will be limited to 2,500 words, will be due by October 14, 2024, and should be written for a general audience. We welcome all questions and inquiries!

Horror Homeroom’s special issues consist of relatively short (2,500 word) well-researched articles that are written for general and academic audiences. They are carefully reviewed by the editors.

Proposed timeline:


Abstracts due: August 18, 2024

Acceptances out: September 2, 2024

Essays due: October 14, 2024


Selected Bibliography:


Aldana Reyes, Xavier. 2014. Body Gothic: Corporeal Transgression in Contemporary Literature and Horror Film, University of Wales Press.

- - - . 2024. Contemporary Body Horror, forthcoming from Cambridge Elements.

Anderson, Jill E. 2023. “Her Body and Other Ghosts: Embodied Horror in the Works of Shirley Jackson and Carmen Maria Machado.” Monstrum 6 (2): 31-50.

Arnold, Sarah. 2013. Maternal Horror Film: Melodrama and Motherhood, Springer.

Brophy, Philip. 1986. “Horrality: The Textuality of the Contemporary Horror Film.” Screen 27 (1): 2–13.

Cruz, Ronald Allan Lopez. 2012. “Mutations and Metamorphoses: Body Horror is Biological Horror.” Journal of Popular Film and Television 40: 160–8.

Diffrient, David Scott. 2023. Body Genre: Anatomy of the Horror Film, University Press of Mississippi.

Folio, Jessica and Holly Luhnig, eds. 2014. Body Horror and Shapeshifting: A Multidisciplinary Exploration, Inter-Disciplinary Press.

Harrington, Erin. 2018. Women, Monstrosity, and Horror Film Gynaehorror, Routledge.

Huckvale, David. 2020. Terrors of the Flesh: The Philosophy of Body Horror in Film, McFarland.

Wasson, Sara. 2020. Transplantation Gothic: Tissue Transfers in Literature, Film, and Medicine, Manchester University Press.

Wald, Priscilla. 2008. Contagious: Cultures, Carriers and the Outbreak Narrative, Duke University Press.

Williams, Linda. 1991. “Film Bodies: Gender, Genre, and Excess.” Film Quarterly 44 (4): 2–13.



Last updated June 24, 2024

Sunday, April 10, 2022

CFP Classic Horror (Spec Issue Horror Homeroom; 4/25/2022)

Classic Horror

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2022/04/01/classic-horror

deadline for submissions:
April 25, 2022

full name / name of organization:
Horror Homeroom

contact email:
dek7@lehigh.edu



CLASSIC HORROR - abstracts due April 25, 2022

2022 is the 90th anniversary of the numerous amazing classic horror films that were released in 1932, among them Freaks, Island of Lost Souls, The Most Dangerous Game, The Old Dark House, The Mummy, and White Zombie. To mark this anniversary, we are soliciting abstracts for a special 'journal' issue of the website Horror Homeroom on classic horror. This special issue, which will come out in 2022, will certainly honor those films that have their anniversary this year, but we also want to broaden what classic horror looks like and are interested in essays that explore other national cinemas and lesser-known films.

So, what is classic horror? We’re suggesting that it’s any film released prior to Alfred Hitchcock’s 1960 film, Psycho--the film that saw the birth of ‘modern’ horror (although we're interested in abstracts that contest those designations!)

Emerging and advanced scholars, popular writers, and fans are invited to submit abstracts on any aspect of the subgenre. Possible topics include, but are not limited to:
  • Body horror and 1930s mad scientists
  • Comedy-horror franchises
  • Intersectional readings of Universal monsters
  • Undead iconography and the Gothic
  • Spencer Williams’ Son of Ingagi and early Black horror
  • Horror film as historical document
  • Otherness and paranoia
  • Film aesthetics
  • Influence of the ‘Code’ on US horror
  • Pre-Hollywood horror
  • Classic horror adaptations of literary works
  • Contemporary cinematic adaptations of classic horror (e.g., Universal’s new monster films)
  • Disability and classic horror
  • Race, ethnicity, and nationalism in early horror

Please submit abstracts of no more than 500 words and a brief bio to Dawn Keetley and Elizabeth Erwin at horrorhomeroom@gmail.com and dek7@lehigh.edu by April 25, 2022. Articles will be limited to 2,500 words and should be written for a general audience. Completed essays will be due June 17, 2022. We welcome all questions and inquiries!




Last updated April 7, 2022