Monsters
Third EditionAndrew J. Hoffman
©2025A fun topic for serious inquiry -- at an affordable price. What could be more interesting to read and write about than monsters? Evaluate central concepts around this theme through readings from classic and contemporary fiction writers, pop culture critics, philosophers, psychologists, historians, and others in Monsters, 3rd edition. With this text you will examine monsters from a diverse range of perspectives and learn to write effectively about them.
Table of Contents
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Introduction for Students
Chapter 1: Why Do We Create Monsters?
Stephen King, Why We Crave Horror Movies
Mary Shelley, from Frankenstein: The Modern Prometheus
Susan Tyler Hitchcock, Conception
Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan, Why Vampires Never Die
Chuck Klosterman, My Zombie, Myself: Why Modern Life Feels Rather Undead
Peter H. Brothers, Japan’s Nuclear Nightmare: How the Bomb Became a Beast Called Godzilla
*Scott O. Moore, The Momo Challenge and the Intersection of Contemporary Legend and Moral Panic
Stephen T. Asma, Monsters and the Moral Imagination
Chapter 2: How Do Monsters Reflect Their Times?
Ted Genoways, Here Be Monsters
Daniel Cohen, The Birth of Monsters
*Anonymous, from Beowulf [[*new excerpt]]
*Edward T. C. Werner, Myths of the Waters
*Basil Johnston, Weendigo
Matt Kaplan, Cursed by a Bite
W. Scott Poole, Monstrous Beginnings
*Iikura Kimie, Japanese Urban Legends from “The Slit-Mouthed Woman” to “Kisaragi Station”
*Bruce Sterling, AI is the Scariest Beast Ever Created
Chapter 3: How Does Gender Affect the Monster?
Amy Fuller, The Evolving Legend of La Llorona
Bram Stoker, from Dracula
*Sarah Stang, Shrieking, Biting, and Licking: The Monstrous-Feminine in Video Games
Sophia Kingshill, Reclaiming the Mermaid
*Jalondra A. Davis, Magic, Mermaids, and the Middle Passage: On Natasha Bowen’s Skin of the Sea
*Gary Morris, Sexual Subversion: The Bride of Frankenstein
Carol J. Clover, Final Girl
Jack Halberstam, Bodies that Splatter: Queers and Chainsaws
Chapter 4: What is the Power of the Monster?
Jeffrey Jerome Cohen, Fear of the Monster Is Really a Kind of Desire
*Daniel Loxton, The Howling Horror of Werewolves!
*Kiley Fox, Noppera Bo and the Fear of Nothingness
Robert Louis Stevenson, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
*Rodrigo Silva Guedes, Jeykll and Hyde: The Monster as a Metaphor
*Adam Chitwood, A Quiet Place Monsters Explained by John Krasinski
Christian Jarrett, The Lure of Horror
Chapter 5: Is the Monster within Us?
Adolf Hitler, Nation and Race
Patrick McCormick, Why Modern Monsters Have Become Alien to Us
*Fay Onyx, Ridding Your Monsters of Ableism
Anne E. Schwartz, Inside a Murdering Mind
William Andrew Myers, Ethical Aliens: The Challenge of Extreme Perpetrators to Humanism
*Mary Retta, The Unexpected Power of Seeing Yourself as the Villain
*Judith Clemens-Smucker, Stranger Teens: Eleven Transforms the Monstrous Symbolism of Adolescence through a Contemporary Narrative Arc
Kevin Berger, Why We Still Need Monsters