Image for Jordan Peele's Get Out : Political Horror

Jordan Peele's Get Out : Political Horror

Keetley, Dawn(Edited by)
Part of the New Suns: Race, Gender, and Sexuality series
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Jordan Peele's Get Out: Political Horror is a collection of sixteen essays devoted to exploring Get Out's roots in the horror tradition and its complex and timely commentary on twenty-first-century US race relations. The first section, "The Politics of Horror," traces the influence of the gothic and horror tradition on Peele's film, from Shakespeare's Othello, through the female gothic and Ira Levin's Rosemary's Baby and The Stepford Wives, to the modern horror film, including the zombie, rural, suburban, and body-swap subgenres of horror. The second section, "The Horror of Politics," takes up Get Out's varied political interventions-notably its portrayal of the continuation of slavery and the deformation of the black body and mind in white, so-called progressive America. Contributors address Peele's film alongside African American figures such as Nat Turner, W. E. B. Du Bois, and James Baldwin. Taken together, the essays illuminate how Get Out stands as both a groundbreaking intervention in the horror tradition as well as a devastating unmasking of racism in the contemporary United States.

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£29.95
Product Details
Ohio State University Press
0814255809 / 9780814255803
Paperback / softback
14/04/2020
English
254 pages, 10 Illustrations
152 x 229 mm, 390 grams