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Men, Women, and Chain Saws

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From its first publication in 1992, Men, Women, and Chain Saws has offered a groundbreaking perspective on the creativity and influence of horror cinema since the mid-1970s. Investigating the popul...
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  • 26 May 2015
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From its first publication in 1992, Men, Women, and Chain Saws has offered a groundbreaking perspective on the creativity and influence of horror cinema since the mid-1970s. Investigating the popularity of the low-budget tradition, Carol Clover looks in particular at slasher, occult, and rape-revenge films. Although such movies have been traditionally understood as offering only sadistic pleasures to their mostly male audiences, Clover demonstrates that they align spectators not with the male tormentor, but with the females tormented—notably the slasher movie's "final girls"—as they endure fear and degradation before rising to save themselves. The lesson was not lost on the mainstream industry, which was soon turning out the formula in well-made thrillers.

Including a new preface by the author, this Princeton Classics edition is a definitive work that has found an avid readership from students of film theory to major Hollywood filmmakers.

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Price: $19.95
Pages: 276
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Imprint: Princeton University Press
Series: Princeton Classics
Publication Date: 26 May 2015
ISBN: 9780691166292
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

PERFORMING ARTS / Film / History & Criticism, Film history, theory or criticism, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Popular Culture, PERFORMING ARTS / Film / General, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Gender Studies, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Women's Studies, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Media Studies, Popular culture, Films, cinema, Gender studies, gender groups, Gender studies: women and girls, Media studies

"[A] brilliant analysis of gender and its disturbances in modern horror films. . . . Bubbling away beneath Clover's multi-faceted readings of slasher, occult, and rape-revenge films is the question of what the viewer gets out of them. . . . [She] argues that most horror films are obsessed with feminism, playing out plots which climax with an image of (masculinized) female power and offering visual pleasures which are organized not around a mastering gaze, but around a more radical "victim-identified' look."---Linda Ruth Williams, Sight and Sound
Carol J. Clover is the Class of 1936 Professor Emerita in the departments of rhetoric, film, and Scandinavian at the University of California, Berkeley. She is the author of The Medieval Saga.