Richard Matheson's Monsters: Gender in the Stories, Scripts, Novels, and Twilight Zone Episodes
By (Author) June M. Pulliam
By (author) Anthony J. Fonseca
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
2nd February 2016
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
791.4572
Hardback
268
Width 161mm, Height 236mm, Spine 25mm
572g
Richard Matheson was one of the leading writers of science fiction, fantasy, and horror in the twentieth century. Mathesons most famous early works, the novels I Am Legend (1954) and The Shrinking Man (1956), both depict traditionally masculine figures thrust into extraordinary situations. Other thought-provoking novels, including Hell House (1971), Bid Time Return (1975), and What Dreams May Come (1978)as well as short stories and screenplaysconvey the ambiguous status of masculinity: how men should behave vis--vis women and what role they should occupy in the family dynamic and in society at large. In Richard Mathesons Monsters: Gender in the Stories, Scripts, Novels and Twilight Zone Episodes, June M. Pulliam and Anthony J. Fonseca examine how this groundbreaking authors writings shed light on societys ever-shifting attitudes on masculinity and domesticity. In this first full-length critical study of Mathesons entire literary output, the authors discuss how I Am Legend, The Shrinking Man, and other works question traditional male roles. The authors examine how Mathesons scripts for The Twilight Zone represented changing expectations in male behavior with the onset of the sexual and feminist revolutions, industrialization and globalization, and other issues. In a society where gender roles are questioned every day, Mathesons work is more relevant than ever. Richard Mathesons Monsters will be of interest to scholars of literature, film, and television, as well those interested in gender and masculinity studies.
June Pulliam teaches courses in horror fiction, gender studies, film and media arts, and Young Adult fiction at Louisiana State University. She is the author of Monstrous Bodies: Feminine Power in Young Adult Horror Fiction. Anthony J. Fonseca is the Library Director at Elms College in Massachusetts. He is currently working on encyclopedias of ghosts, musician and band films, and international hip-hop culture. Pulliam and Fonseca have coauthored Hooked on Horror and coedited The Encyclopedia of the Zombie.