The Real Blurred Lines: On Liminality in Horror and the Threatened Boundary Between the Real and the Imagined

The horror genre is obsessed with being treated as fact rather than fiction. From movies that plaster their title screens with "Based on actual events" to urban legends that happened to a friend of a friend, the horror genre thrives on being treated as fact even when it is more often ficti...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: West, Brandon Charles
Other Authors: English
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/86381
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-863812020-09-29T05:45:11Z The Real Blurred Lines: On Liminality in Horror and the Threatened Boundary Between the Real and the Imagined West, Brandon Charles English Knapp, Shoshana Milgram Metz, Nancy Aycock Graham, Peter W. Horror Film Liminality Gothic Reality The horror genre is obsessed with being treated as fact rather than fiction. From movies that plaster their title screens with "Based on actual events" to urban legends that happened to a friend of a friend, the horror genre thrives on being treated as fact even when it is more often fiction. Yet horror does more than claim verisimilitude. Whereas some stories are content to pass as reality, other stories question whether a boundary between fiction and reality even exists. They give us monsters that become real when their names are spoken (Tales from the Darkside) and generally undermine the boundaries we take for granted. Wes Craven's New Nightmare, for instance, shows a malevolent being forcibly blending the characters' reality with the fiction they themselves created. But why are scary stories concerned with seeming real and undermining our notions of reality? To answer this, I draw on various horror films and philosophical and psychological notions of the self and reality. Ultimately, I argue, horror is a didactic genre obsessed with showing us reality as it is, not as we wish it to be. Horror confronts us not only with our mortality (as in slasher films) but also with the truth that fiction and reality are not the easily divided categories we often take them to be. Master of Arts 2018-12-14T07:00:31Z 2018-12-14T07:00:31Z 2017-06-21 Thesis vt_gsexam:11756 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/86381 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Horror
Film
Liminality
Gothic
Reality
spellingShingle Horror
Film
Liminality
Gothic
Reality
West, Brandon Charles
The Real Blurred Lines: On Liminality in Horror and the Threatened Boundary Between the Real and the Imagined
description The horror genre is obsessed with being treated as fact rather than fiction. From movies that plaster their title screens with "Based on actual events" to urban legends that happened to a friend of a friend, the horror genre thrives on being treated as fact even when it is more often fiction. Yet horror does more than claim verisimilitude. Whereas some stories are content to pass as reality, other stories question whether a boundary between fiction and reality even exists. They give us monsters that become real when their names are spoken (Tales from the Darkside) and generally undermine the boundaries we take for granted. Wes Craven's New Nightmare, for instance, shows a malevolent being forcibly blending the characters' reality with the fiction they themselves created. But why are scary stories concerned with seeming real and undermining our notions of reality? To answer this, I draw on various horror films and philosophical and psychological notions of the self and reality. Ultimately, I argue, horror is a didactic genre obsessed with showing us reality as it is, not as we wish it to be. Horror confronts us not only with our mortality (as in slasher films) but also with the truth that fiction and reality are not the easily divided categories we often take them to be. === Master of Arts
author2 English
author_facet English
West, Brandon Charles
author West, Brandon Charles
author_sort West, Brandon Charles
title The Real Blurred Lines: On Liminality in Horror and the Threatened Boundary Between the Real and the Imagined
title_short The Real Blurred Lines: On Liminality in Horror and the Threatened Boundary Between the Real and the Imagined
title_full The Real Blurred Lines: On Liminality in Horror and the Threatened Boundary Between the Real and the Imagined
title_fullStr The Real Blurred Lines: On Liminality in Horror and the Threatened Boundary Between the Real and the Imagined
title_full_unstemmed The Real Blurred Lines: On Liminality in Horror and the Threatened Boundary Between the Real and the Imagined
title_sort real blurred lines: on liminality in horror and the threatened boundary between the real and the imagined
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/86381
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