Description

Despite Disney’s carefully crafted image of family friendliness, Gothic elements are pervasive in all of Disney’s productions, ranging from its theme parks to its films and television programs. The contributors to Disney Gothic reveal that the Gothic, in fact, serves as the unacknowledged motor of the Disney machine. Exploring representations of villains, ghosts, and monsters, this book sheds important new light on the role these Gothic elements play throughout the Disney universe in constructing and reinforcing conceptions of normalcy and deviance in relation to shifting understandings of morality, social roles, and identity categories. In doing so, this book raises fascinating questions about the appeal, marketing, and consumption of Gothic horror by adults and particularly by children, who historically have been Disney’s primary audience.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Dark Shadows in the House of Mouse
Lorna Piatti-Farnell and Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock

Part 1: Dark Beginnings and Gothic Technologies

Chapter 1: Silly Spookiness: The Skeletons of Early Disney
Murray Leeder

Chapter 2: From Gothic to Gags: Disney’s Comic Deconstruction of Death
Terry Lindvall

Chapter 3: Hidden Histories: The Many Ghosts of Disney’s Haunted Mansion
Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock

Chapter 4: Monsters on the Mouse-Tube: The Gothic Horror Cinematic Tradition and the Disney Channel Original Movie
Jay Bamber

Chapter 5: Sinister Surveillance: Threatened Youth in Disney's Watcher in the Woods and Something Wicked This Way Comes
Carl H. Sederholm and Kathy Merlock Jackson

Chapter 6: The Game is Playing Itself: Fear, Technology, and the Disney Slasher
Gwyneth Peaty

Part 2: Monsters and Magic

Chapter 7: Disney’s Tetratologies: Animated Discourses on Monsters and Heroes
Kevin J. Wetmore

Chapter 8: ’Who is the monster and who is the man?’: Disney’s Medieval Gothic in The Hunchback of Notre Dame
J.S. Mackley

Chapter 9: Voodoo, Hoodoo, and Friends on the Other Side: Magic, Cultural Echoes, and the Gothic Trajectories of Difference in Disney’s The Princess and the Frog
Nancy Johnson-Hunt and Lorna Piatti-Farnell

Chapter 10: The Human/Animal Divide: Feral Children, Liminalities, and the Gothic in Disney’s The Jungle Book and Tarzan
Antonio Sanna

Chapter 11: Primitive Life and Animated Death: Fantasia’s ‘Rite of Spring’ as Ecogothic
Christy Tidwell

Part 3: Something Wicked

Chapter 12: Maleficent: Monstrosity, Truth, and Post-Truth in Disney’s Transmedia Fairyverse
Joan Ormrod

Chapter 13: Mother Knows Best: Questioning the Moral and the Immoral in Disney’s Tangled
Angelique Nairn

Chapter 14: The Vampire Queen of the Disney Scene: The Vampiric, Gothic Excess of Ursula from The Little Mermaid
Simon Bacon

Chapter 15: Gorgeous, Vicious and a “Little Bit Mad”: Queer-Gothic and Excessive Desire in Cruella
Blair Speakman

Product details

Published May 10 2024
Format Hardback
Edition 1st
Extent 266
ISBN 9781666907209
Imprint Lexington Books
Illustrations 34 BW Photos
Dimensions 237 x 159 mm
Series Research in Horror Studies
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Anthology Editor

Lorna Piatti-Farnell

Lorna Piatti-Farnell is Academic Dean at SAE Creat…

Contributor

Murray Leeder

Contributor

Terry Lindvall

Contributor

Jay Bamber

Contributor

Gwyneth Peaty

Contributor

J.S. Mackley

Contributor

Lorna Piatti-Farnell

Lorna Piatti-Farnell is Academic Dean at SAE Creat…

Contributor

Antonio Sanna

Contributor

Christy Tidwell

Contributor

Joan Ormrod

Contributor

Angelique Nairn

Contributor

Simon Bacon

Contributor

Blair Speakman

Related Titles

Environment: Staging