Horror Culture in the New Millennium: Digital Dissonance and Technohorror
By (Author) Daniel W. Powell
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
23rd November 2018
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
791.436164
Hardback
190
Width 159mm, Height 230mm, Spine 18mm
481g
Horror Culture in the New Millennium: Digital Dissonance and Technohorror explores the myriad ways in which technology is altering the human experience as articulated in horrific storytelling. The text surveys a variety of emerging trends and story forms in the field, through both a series of critical essays and personal interviews with scholars, editors, authors, and artists now creating and refining horror stories in the new millennium. The project posits a rationale for the presence of technohorror as a defining concern in contemporary horror literature, marking a departure from the monstrous and spectral traditions of the twentieth century in its depictions of frightful narratives marked by the qualities of plausibility, mundanity, and surprise as we tell stories about what it means to be human. As our culture explores the dichotomies of the born/made, natural/artificial, and human/computerall while subsumed within a paradigm shift predicated on the transition from the traditions of print to emerging digital communications practicesthese changes form the basis for horrific speculations in our texts and technologies. Ultimately, Digital Dissonance: Horror Culture in the New Millennium explores that paradoxical human attraction for peering into the darkness as translated through our lived experiences in an era of rapidly evolving technologies.
Daniel Powell shows us that the fear of the darkest part of the forest has been transformed into fear of the shadows on the digital frontier. In the concept of technohorror, he explores how social media and netlore have become nests for new monsters. After reading his book, you may be afraid of looking to long into your computer screen. -- W. Scott Poole, College of Charleston
Daniel Powell is professor of writing at Florida State College at Jacksonville.