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Capitalism Hates You: Marxism and the New Horror Film
By (Author) Joshua Gooch
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
18th June 2025
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Political science and theory
Capitalism
Film history, theory or criticism
Film, television, radio genres: Science fiction, fantasy and horror
791.436
Paperback
280
Width 140mm, Height 216mm, Spine 14mm
340g
What contemporary horror films teach us about the cruelties of capitalist society
Capitalism Hates You uses the horror film genre as a tool to diagnose and expose the hostile conditions of life under capitalism. Through incisive critical analyses of popular films such as Get Out, Drag Me to Hell, Hereditary, The Babadook, and many others, Joshua Gooch draws connections between Marxist theory and contemporary narratives of psychological unease.
Gooch highlights the work of women, trans, and nonwhite filmmakers to show how the remarkable diversity of twenty-first-century horror cinema can provide an expansive catalog of capitalism's varying forms of oppression. Analyzing films that interrogate such urgent topics as gentrification, climate change, and reproductive labor, he demonstrates how contemporary horror films give affective shape to the negative undercurrents of our present socioeconomic system.
Capitalism Hates You argues that these films and their material conditions can deepen our understanding of essential concepts in contemporary Marxism, from the theory of value and changing forms of commodification to the labor of social reproduction, the abolition of the family, and the necessity of ecosocialism. Synthesizing various strands of Marxist thought, Gooch sheds light on the growing field of socially conscious horror films, examining how they pinpoint and exaggerate latent feelings of dread and discomfort to reflect the ills of society.
Joshua Gooch is professor of English at D'Youville University. He is author of Dickensian Affects: Charles Dickens and Feelings of Precarity and The Victorian Novel, Service Work, and the Nineteenth-Century Economy.