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Man-Eating Monsters: Anthropocentrism and Popular Culture


Man-Eating Monsters: Anthropocentrism and Popular Culture

Hardback by Khapaeva, Dina (Georgia Institute of Technology, USA)

Man-Eating Monsters: Anthropocentrism and Popular Culture

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ISBN:
9781787695283
Publication Date:
11 Nov 2019
Language:
English
Publisher:
Emerald Publishing Limited
Pages:
136 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 27 - 29 May 2024
Man-Eating Monsters: Anthropocentrism and Popular Culture

Description

What role do man-eating monsters - vampires, zombies, werewolves and cannibals - play in contemporary culture? This book explores the question of whether recent representations of humans as food in popular culture characterizes a unique moment in Western cultural history and suggests a new set of attitudes toward people, monsters, animals, and death. This volume analyzes how previous epochs represented man-eating monsters and cannibalism. Cultural taboos across the world are explored and brought into perspective whilst we contemplate how the representations of humans as commodities can create a global atmosphere that creeps towards cannibalism as a norm. This book also explores the links between the role played by the animal rights movement in problematizing the difference between humans and nonhuman animals. Instead of looking at the relations between food, body, and culture, or the ways in which media images of food reach out to various constituencies and audiences, as some existing studies do, this collection is focused on the crucial question, of how and why popular culture representations diffuse the borders between monsters, people, and animals, and how this affects our ideas about what may and may not be eaten.

Contents

Foreword; Jacque Lynn Foltyn Introduction: Food for Monsters: Popular Culture and Our Basic Food Taboo; Dina Khapaeva Chapter 1. Antihumanism and Popular Culture; Dina Khapaeva Chapter 2. Terrapin; Paul Freedman Chapter 3. Transcendental Guilt and Eating Human Beings, or Levinas's Meeting with the Zombies; Sami Pihlström Chapter 4. Blue Books, Baedekers, Cookbooks, and the Monsters in the Mirror: Bram Stoker's Dracula; Carol Senf Chapter 5. Edible Humans: Undermining the Human Subject in Zombie Films and Television; Kelly Doyle Chapter 6. The Soviet Cannibal: Who Eats Whom in Andrey Platonov's "Rubbish Wind"; Svetlana Tcareva

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