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Supernatural Mothers and Wombs of Discontent

Exploring Horror's Deviant Reproductions

Supernatural Mothers and Wombs of Discontent cover

Supernatural Mothers and Wombs of Discontent

Exploring Horror's Deviant Reproductions

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Description

Contributors to this volume examine the womb and the mother as separate sources of supernatural reproduction in horror media, arguing that the alchemy of pregnancy and birth offers myriad critical possibilities in horror, particularly in the context of the monstrous feminine and gynae horror.

From television shows like WandaVision and films like The Witch (2015) to novels like Toni Morrison's Beloved and Salman Rushdie's Victory City, contributors examine a range of horror media texts to offer a dedicated examination of supernatural motherhood in diverse contexts.

Supernatural Mothers and Wombs of Discontent is divided into three sections to guide the reader through various themes and narratives of the genre. Part One examines the challenges both to and of power represented by the figure of the witch through analyses of themes of magical motherhood, the “anti-mother”, and exploitation. Part Two, focusing more fully on the Othering of the mother in the face of supernatural reproduction, examines themes of abject othering, vulnerability, and paradoxical reproduction. Part Three then brings these narratives together to interrogate motherhood as an expression of systemic power relations, with the supernatural functioning as a foil against which the social construction of birth, birthing, and motherhood may be reconsidered and, perhaps, redefined.

Table of Contents

Introduction: The Magic in the Horror: Spellinga Different Perspective on Reproduction in Horror
Ruth Barratt-Peacock (Independent Scholar, UK)

Part I: Witches
1. WandaVision: When Horror (Re)frames Magical Motherhood
Ruth Barratt-Peacock (Independent Scholar, UK)
2. The Witch as Anti-Mother in Eggers's The Witch
Mark Henderson (Tuskegee University, USA)
3. Irish Witches, Familiars, and Mother Earth: Exploitation of Women, Animals, and the Environment in Irish History and Modern Media
Evelyn Suttle (Advocate, Ireland)

Part II: M/Others
4. M/othering and the Abject in Molly Cochran's The Third Magic
Radhia Flah Gaich (University of Sousse, Tunisia)
5. Magical Vulnerability and Vulnerable Magic: The Witch (M)Other in Salman Rushdie's Victory City
Sreelakshmy M (National Institute of Technology, India)
6. Fangs and Phalluses: The Barren, Pregnant Vampire
Evie Kendal (Swinburne University of Technology, Australia)

Part III: Wombs and Their Progeny
7. Wombs of Discontent: Unveiling Gender Abjection through Dolls in Lucky McKee's May
Amylou Ahava (Independent Scholar, USA)
8. Chapter 8: Gynae Horror in Select Hindi Cinema: The Womb as The Element of Horror
Shrenya Soni (Independent Scholar, India)
9. A Haunting Healing in Toni Morrison's Beloved
Jeff Ambrose (Delaware County Community College, USA)
10. Chapter 10: Miscarriage in Contemporary Film: Visualizing the Unseen Through the Horror Scene
Katherine Cottle (Goucher College, USA)

About the Contributors
Index

Product details

Bloomsbury Academic Test
Published Oct 01 2026
Format Hardback
Edition 1st
Pages 240
ISBN 9798216365716
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Illustrations 1 bw illus
Dimensions 229 x 152 mm
Series Research in Horror Studies
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Anthology Editor

Ruth Barratt-Peacock

Dr. Ruth Barratt-Peacock has professional associat…

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