"With the same far-reaching scope and incisive critical eye that they demonstrated in <i>Infected Empires: Decolonizing Zombies</i>, here Saldarriaga and Manini interrogate women, toxic imagination, and monstrosity in the horror film. The result is another tour de force." - Cynthia Steele (translator of Crónicas de la Nueva Esperanza / Chronicles of New Hope) "<i>Monsters vs. Patriarchy</i> is an intelligent, politically charged exploration of global horror cinema, exposing how patriarchal power dehumanizes marginalized identities through 'toxic imagination.' Essential reading for those who see horror not just as entertainment, but as a lens, a weapon, and a force for radical resistance." - Angela Ndalianis (author of The Horror Sensorium: Media and the Senses)
Monsters vs. Patriarchy examines female monstrosity as it appears in horror films from around the world and considers specific political, scientific, and historical contexts to better understand how we construct and reconstruct monstrosity, using an intersectional approach to examine the imposition of gender and racial hierarchies that support national power structures. The authors contend that monstrous female cinematic subjects, including ghosts, witches, cannibals, and posthuman beings, are becoming empowered, using the tools of their monstrification to smash the colonial, white supremacist, and misogynist structures that created them.
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Biografisk notat
PATRICIA SALDARRIAGA is a professor of Luso-Hispanic studies at Middlebury College in Vermont. Among her publications, she is a coauthor of Infected Empires: Decolonizing Zombies (Rutgers University Press).EMY MANINI is an independent scholar working in contemporary literature and culture of the Americas. She is based in Seattle, Washington. She earned her PhD in Spanish literature from the University of Washington in 2002. She is a coauthor of Infected Empires: Decolonizing Zombies (Rutgers University Press).