Gothic Feminism presents:
Technology,
Women, and Gothic-Horror On-Screen
2 – 3 May
2019
Keynote
speaker: Dr Lisa Purse (University of Reading)
Gothic and
technology appear, on the surface, to evoke contradictory connotations. As
David Punter and Glennis Byron highlight, the Gothic came to be a term
associated with the “ornate and convoluted”, “excess and exaggeration, the
product of the wild and the uncivilized, a world that constantly tended to overflow
cultural boundaries” (Punter and Byron, 2004, 7). Technology, on the other
hand, is a term often linked to science, innovation and progressive invention.
If the Industrial Revolution is emblematic of what one imagines a technological
revolution to be, then technology becomes synonymous with the associations
defining 18th Century culture, described by Terry Castle as “the period as an
age of reason and enlightenment – the aggressively rationalist imperatives of
the epoch” (Castle, 1995, 8).
Yet
technology and the Gothic have been linked and have interacted since the
latter’s beginnings in fiction. From the earliest reception of the original
novels that give our Gothic films their name, fans and critics alike referred
to the “machinery” of the narratives, implying that that the mechanisms that
made them go were audible. Clara Reeve, who wrote The Old English Baron –
itself is a tad creaky – commented on The Castle of Otranto that “the machinery
is so violent, that it destroys the effect it is intended to excite” (Reeve,
2008, 3). And Horace Walpole, himself, made reference to the story’s “engine”
(Walpole, 2014, 6). The Gothic can thus
be conceptualised as metaphorically mechanical, a link explored within a
different context by Jack Halberstam who writes that “Gothic fiction is a
technology of subjectivity … designed to produce fear and desire within the
reader” (Halberstam, 1995, 2).
Technology
and the Gothic have also intersected in more literal terms, as with the horror
created by the intersection of the two in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818).
On the one hand, the novel stands as a canonical Gothic text, and Ellen Moers
argues that the story can be defined as the Female Gothic, a term commonly
associated with the women-in-peril narratives which later saw the influence of
Gothic literature translated onto the cinema screen in Hollywood during the
1940s. On the other hand, the tale of an unnatural and scientific birth is
credited with establishing the generic tropes of science fiction, a mode of
storytelling which is indebted to technology and acknowledges “contemporary
scientific knowledge and the scientific method”, as Barry Keith Grant suggests.
He also continues: “Science fiction, quite unlike fantasy and horror, works to
entertain alternative possibilities” (Grant, 2004, 17). However, Fred Botting
notes that the combining of science fiction and Gothic – two “generic monsters”
– reveals a “a long and interwoven association” whereby both genres “give form
to a sense of otherness, a strangeness that is difficult to locate” (Botting,
2008, 131).
Our
conference aims to explore this relationship between technology and the Gothic
by focussing upon its intersection as depicted on screen within visual media,
with a specific focus on how such concerns impact on gender representations
and, in particular, women. This connection may be explored figuratively: the
“machinery” identified in Gothic fiction can also be extended to the filmic
Gothics which centre upon the Gothic heroine. The Hollywood 1940s Gothics possess
noticeably excessive convolutions of plot, as with Sleep, My Love (1948), and
one could argue this trend has continued in contemporary returns to the Old
Dark House and horror with films like Crimson Peak (2015). Technology may also
be physically present within these Gothic-horror films. If the “machinery is so
violent” in Crimson Peak’s narrative, then this is additionally foregrounded
within the diegesis: Thomas Sharpe’s engine for extracting the red clay from
the ground stands as both a metaphor for the genre’s mechanical plot – drawing
on familiar tropes which unearth deadly secrets – as well as functioning as a
visual spectacle around which the climax of the film shall take place.
Actual
mechanical or technological inventions which impact upon the story may be
wide-ranging: the railway, cars, telephones, recording devices, electric light
and gaslight are just some examples of technologies integrated into the
narratives of Gothic films, often with the intention of contributing to the
imperilment and oppression of the central heroine. Technology can also do this
by evoking the uncanny, itself a phenomenon which forms “the background and
indeed the modus operandi of much Gothic fiction” (Punter and Byron, 2004,
286). Tom Gunning demonstrates this when he recounts several versions in early
cinema of a woman-in-jeopardy story, Heard Over the Phone, which could almost
be Gothic in that the woman is in her own home and menaced there by a male
assailant. Drawing on Freud’s musings upon the ambivalent nature of technology,
Gunning highlights the ambiguous – and uncanny – position of the telephone: it
is a device which brings the absent near through sound, but actually this
serves only to underline the actual distances involved. Gothic-type narratives,
gender, and technology merge in these early films to reveal “the darker aspects
of the dream world of instant communication and the annihilation of space and
time” (Gunning, 1991, 188).
More recent
Gothic and Gothic-horror films may update these technologies to include
computers, the Internet and mobile phones. Technology also includes film and
the moving image itself: this conference will explore how filmic technologies
mediate and emphasise the connection between technology, the Gothic, and
gender, including through the use of visual effects. Film is a particularly apt
medium through which to contemplate these ideas as cinema’s ontology embodies
both technology’s scientific roots and the Gothic’s appeal to excess and the
supernatural. As Murray Leeder notes: “With its ability to record and replay
reality and its presentation of images that resemble the world but as
intangible half-presences, cinema has been described as a haunted or ghostly
medium from early on” (Leeder, 2015, 3).
These ideas
may also be explored by expanding upon the original notion of Moer’s Female
Gothic: if the literary Female Gothic is defined by female writers working in
this mode, then this conference would also like to explore how female
filmmakers have made use of Gothic-horror conventions. It is significant to
note that the most iconic examples of Gothic films focusing on stories about
the victimisation of women, particularly in the 1940s, were directed by men. By
thinking about the technology behind the screen, this event will also consider what
influence women filmmakers have had upon this tradition, including within
present day, and what further reflections may be offered between this
relationship of the Gothic to gender and technology.
With this
third annual Gothic Feminism conference, we invite scholars to respond to the
theme of technology in the woman-in-jeopardy strand of the Gothic and
Gothic-horror film or television.
Topics can
include but are not limited to:
- the tension between Gothic and technology as the supernatural, fantastic and paranoia versus the rational, reason and logic. How do these elements intersect with the representation of gender in film and television?
- the traditions of the Gothic heroine on-screen and her interaction with technology. Does technology help the female character or is it another agent of terror used against her?
- the technology behind the screen. How have female filmmakers used the genres of Gothic-horror to express themselves?
- the technology of the screen. How has the technology of cinema, including visual effects, been used, and how do these aspects interact with the representation of the central female protagonist/s?
Please
submit proposals of 500 words, along with a short biographical note (250 words)
to gothicfeminism2016@gmail.com by Friday 15th February 2019.
We welcome
20-minute conference papers as well as submissions for creative work or
practice-as-research including, but not limited to, short films and video
essays.
Conference
organisers: Frances A. Kamm and Tamar Jeffers McDonald
This
conference is the third annual event from the Gothic Feminism project, working
with the Melodrama Research Group in the Centre of Film and Media Research at
the University of Kent. Gothic Feminism explores the representation of the
Gothic heroine on-screen in her various incarnations.
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