Skin Shows: Gothic Horror And The Technology Essay

¶ … Skin Shows: Gothic Horror and the Technology of Monstrosity by Judith Halberstam The Gothic Tradition

Judith Halberstam discusses many different facets of the Gothic tradition in the first chapter of her book entitled Skin Shows: Gothic Horror and the Technology of Monstrosity. For the most part, this chapter is extremely dense and fragmented. The author spends the bulk of it discussing several different aspects of the Gothic, and telling the reader about things that she "will" discuss. As such, she covers a range of topic, yet none of them are done so in an amount of depth that will help the reader to understand the significance of these points.

Still, there are some basic points which she manages to make clear. She pinpoints the Gothic tradition as stemming from 18th century literature, and believes that this tradition has gone on to change media and reproduce itself within the medium of film. In writing about such a transition, the other makes a number of prudent...

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For instance, she alludes to the limitations of the imagination that film presents, while also implying that in literature there are no limits or there are only those that the reader's imagination can produce. This is a crucial distinction between these media, and one which the author does well to point out.
Another fairly important motif that she writes about in this chapter is the significance of skin to the Gothic tradition. Moreover, this aspect of the Gothic tradition is one of the many which have spanned different media as well as several centuries (when one considers that we are in the 21st century now). However, she explains the fact that skin is one of the central components of Gothic horror because it is used to veil monstrosity, and that there is an eventual erosion of it so that "slowly but surely the outside becomes the inside and the hide no longer conceals" (Halberstam,…

Sources Used in Documents:

References

Halberstam, J. (1995). Skin Shows: Gothic Horror and the Technology of Monstrosity. Durham: Duke University Press.


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