I am
looking for proposals for chapters for an academic book on the Netflix series
The Haunting of Hill House to be published by McFarland & Company.
While the
existence of shows such as American Horror Story, Preacher, The Walking Dead,
Supernatural, Stranger Things, The Terror, Castle Rock, The Strain and Penny
Dreadful gives the impression we are living in a golden age of horror
television, The Haunting of Hill House on Netflix seems to be a game-changer
that takes small-screen dread to a new height. Less than a month in release,
the series has garnered a great deal of praise and media discussion. Stephen
King called it “nearly perfect” and “close to a work of genius,” Nerdist posted
an article entitled “Why You Should Watch The Haunting of Hill House,” the show
has 100% on Rotten Tomatoes, was praised in GQ as “the first great horror TV
show,” and in Forbes as “perfect for Halloween.” Critical reaction has been
mostly glowing, albeit with some very obvious critiques of the series (see, for
example, Holly Green’s “How Netflix’s The Haunting of Hill House Betrays
Shirley Jackson,” which found the series “egregious and disrespectful.”) The
show thus is controversial (especially its ending and its approach to its
source material) and yet is also highly regarded as effective horror
television.
Not a Fit
Place: Essays on The Haunting of Hill House proposes to explore and analyze the
series from a variety of critical perspectives. The individual essays will be
4000-6000 words each. Successful proposals will explore an aspect of The
Haunting in a unique manner and offers something to say that illuminates the
series beyond opinion-as-analysis. Given the nature of the project and the
desire to have the volume out before Halloween 2019, we have an accelerated
project timeline.
The
Deadlines:
I will
accept abstracts on a rolling basis up until December 15, 2018. Those whose
abstracts are accepted will be sent the style guide and information regarding
the preparation of manuscripts.
Contributors
must submit the first draft of their essays to me by April 15, 2019. I plan to
have the final, full manuscript to McFarland by June 15, 2019, so we will have
two months for edits and further development of essays.
Please note,
no extensions can be given once accepted, so please only submit abstracts if
you are certain you can adhere to this timetable. The deadline for manuscript
submission is set, so the expectation is that final essays will be in by the
above dates.
I am looking
for essays on any other topic relating to the volume’s theme. Possible topics
include but are not limited to:
- The relationship between novel and series.
- Jackson’s themes and motifs as adapted (or betrayed) by the series
- A comparison and contrasting of the Netflix series with previous film versions (1963, 1999).
- Contextualizing The Haunting of Hill House in director Mike Flanagan’s body of work.
- Other haunted house narratives on screen and HoHH (Legend of Hell House, Rose Red, The Changeling, The Conjuring, etc.).
- “Hauntings” as metaphor for trauma, addiction, infidelity and mental illness in the series.
- The shaping influence of Stephen King on the Netflix series.
- “Hidden Ghosts” – the presence of figures in the background and what they do for the series.
- Methodological critiques of the show: feminist, economic, ecocritical, queer, etc.
- Time and structure in HoHH.
- Marriage in HoHH
- The Haunting of Hill House and This Is Us as diachronic narrative of family.
- HoHH and Westworld (or other show) as non-linear narrative.
- Revelations and Endings: HoHH as apocalyptic narrative.
Please
submit 250-500 word abstracts with a brief bio to: kwetmore@lmu.edu by December
15, 2018.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario